Socked on the nose

1928 King George V socked on the nose
Ideally centered Austrian cancellation ca 1858
A selection of Prague postmarked stamps from 1850–1890 with mainly socked on the nose cancels; some cancels are too large to fit on the stamp

Socked on the nose ("SON"), also called Bullseye, in philately, refers to a cancellation of a postage stamp in which the postmark, typically a circle with the date and town name where mailed, has been applied centered on the stamp.[1][2] The ideal SON has the entire postmark inside the margins, although this is not always possible, because the stamp may be too small or the postmark too large.

Austria introduced ca 1868 a set of cancellations of small diameter (< 20 mm), so that they could be seen entirely on all stamps: (de) Fingerhut, (en) Thimble.[3]

This SON expression does not seem to be used in Europe: the terms (fr) Oblitération centrale or simply (de) luxus are in common usage (not all stamps have a nose).

Some philatelists and collectors of cancellations have a special interest in, prefer, and/or collect SON mainly because the date, time, and place the stamp was used, or postmarked, can be identified by the cancellation. This allows specialised collectors to collect, for example, all of the postmarks of a particular country, state, city, county, date range, etc., without collecting entire covers.[4]

There can be some confusion with the term "Bullseye" as it can mean both the type of cancel, such as the early USA concentric ring cancel (as well as other countries that used them) and to have a cancel positioned right in the center of a stamp. So while an SON cancel is always near the centre of a stamp and can be an example of a Circular Date Stamp (CDS) or a "Bullseye" cancel or other shapes that were used as cancelling devices, (Square, Oval etc.) strictly speaking a "Bullseye Cancel" literally is a cancel that looks like a "bullseye".

Because modern machine cancellations are normally arranged so that the "wavy lines", slogans, or other killers are applied to the stamp, leaving the postmark clear, dealers and collectors desiring SONs will position the stamp on the cover so as to fall under the postmark.[5]

The term Bull's Eye also is used for the first stamps of Brazil.

References and sources

Notes
  1. R. Scott Carlton, The International Encyclopaedic Dictionary of Philately (Iola, Wi. 1997), p. 38.
  2. Youngblood, Wayne; Bull's-Eye Cancel Collecting, The American Philatelist, Mar. 2009, p. 216. ISSN 0003-0473
  3. Handbook of Austria and Lombardy-Venetia Cancellations on the Postage Stamp Issues 1850-1864, by Edwin MUELLER, 1961, Introduction p.XVI
  4. Linns.com Refresher Course Collecting used postage stamps isn't quite as simple as it might seem (retrieved 2 July 2007)
  5. The Complete Guide to Stamp Collecting: Stamp Cancellations. Part 2 (retrieved 2 July 2007)

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, October 12, 2012. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.