Posted 3 years ago
potrero
(155 items)
Still relevant.
The 1960s was the start of large scale environmentalism (larger than say John Muir and TR), with the publication of Rachel Carsons Silent Spring and other things that woke people up to the dangers of DDT and species extinction.
Note the happy little zip code guy in the margin. Doesn't care about the environment, just whether you use the zip code!
Vintage Guru Reveals Her Glamour Secrets
The Killer Mobile Device for Victorian Women
Gloriously Grotesque 19th-Century Pipes
The Beautiful Chaos of Improvisational Quilts
Our Dad, the Water Witch of Wyoming
This 1959 Goggomobil Is Insanely Cute and Gets 55 MPG. Why Can’t Detroit Do That?
California Cool: How the Wetsuit Became the Surfer's Second Skin
The Unfiltered History of Rolling Papers, Plus Tommy Chong's Big Fat Jamaican Vacation
World's Smallest Museum Finds the Wonder in Everyday Objects
Fightin’ Femmes: Unmasking Female Superheroes with Author Mike Madrid

I am inventorying my late father's stamp collections. He save commerative plate blocks, but several don't have the serial #. Don't the plate blocks have to have the serial #'s, on the selveged edge to be valuable? Aren't those w/o the serial # just worth face value?
Thank you.
Peggy - I don't know that its so much the presence of the serial number that matters (though it definitely helps), as the rarity of the stamps themselves.
As with another post, I like your commentary.