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Postage stamp design error

A postage stamp design error is a mistake made during the design phase of the postage stamp production process. Design errors most commonly occur as minor mistakes, such as a missing letter in the binomial name of an organism depicted on the stamp, but some have been major gaffes, such as a map appearing to lay claim to another country's territory, or the depiction of the wrong person on the stamp.

Some notable design errors
Pagsanjan Falls stamp, Philippines 1932 • Franz Schubert/Robert Schumann error, East Germany 1956 • Gronchi Rosa, Italy 1961 • The Whole Country is Red, China 1968 • Legends of the West, United States 1993 • Queen Elizabeth II error, Malta 2008 • Predator Free 2050, New Zealand 2018. The largest known run of a postage stamp error was the 2011 "Statue of Liberty Forever stamp" by the United States Postal Service. As many as 10.5 billion incorrect stamps were produced between the design's release in December 2010 and the error identification in March 2011, when the Texas stock photo company Sunipix noted that the design featured the Las Vegas replica of the Statue of Liberty rather than the original Statue of Liberty. == Postage stamp design error types ==
Postage stamp design error types
Design errors are different from any other types of errors including typographical errors, incorrect watermarks, overprints, paper types, perforation, and gums. There are the following types of design errors: • Errors in the plotIncompatible features: • errors in chronological compatibility • errors in the depiction of natural phenomena • errors in the depiction of technological processes • Invalid features: • errors associated with the ownership of territories • mistakes in state and religious symbols • errors related to personalities • Errors in inscriptions or overprints (in numbers, names, concepts)Typos, clerical, spelling, punctuation mistakesSemantic, factual errors ==See also==
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