Auction #37: Worldwide Stamps, Postal History, Worldwide Coins & Worldwide Banknotes
This auction features Worldwide Postal History Especially Holyland Foreruners Postcards And Covers, Large Collection Of Gold Coins From All Over The World. And Huge Amount Of Banknotes. Other Interesting Items Included As Well.
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COLLECTION of "Preliminary Pencil Drawings and Sketches" in black & white and colour, for issue of Israel Postage Stamps. Include preliminary setup of parts for the artwork, pencil drawings for the sketch, final pencil drawings and alternative sketches, original artwork after corrections, original colour designs submitted, presentation of the printing process and poster colour separation, final designers proofs. Also include colour proof of Painting by the Israeli painter "Ludwig Blum. All the artwork by designer "ASHER KALDERON", also include his autograph.
Mixed Lot of Incoming Mail sent from and to various destinations, 130 Covers, Postcards, Aerograms, Pictured Postcards, w/Postage stamps and Pmks from different countries, varied Postmarks, 1930s,40s,50s, Airmail-,Registered-,Express Labels and Cachets, also include covers sent from Syrian Arab Republic w/Postage stamps & Pmks, Returned Mail, Red Cross Cover opened by Censor, EL AL Israel Airlines Postcard among others
Mixed Lot of Incoming Mail, 24 Covers, Postcards, Receipts, sent from and to various destinations, 1927 to 1954, include Doar Ivri Postage Stamps, Mandate Receipts w/stamps on reverse, Postage-Due III stamps, Registered Mail, Airmail, with Cachets, Labels
Soldiers writing from the front.
In the wars of Israel, the IDF made sure to allow soldiers at the front to write home, and gave soldiers different postcards that enabled them to smile and write home a few words.
And envelopes. Usually, the number of postcards was limited. Only in the Yom Kippur War of 1973 were dozens of models of postcards sent to the front in packages of battle rations. The soldiers returned the postcards with every vehicle that returned to the rear, and especially helicopters that returned the wounded. The main postcards were prepared by:
1) Post office with postal symbol and symbol (4 different).
2) Government ministries.
3) The IDF by a Chief Education Officer.
4) The management of Shikam.
5) The Committee for the Soldier.
6) Private companies that printed the postcards and submitted them to the Committee for the Soldier.
The postcards that reached the military bases received the stamp of the triangle, some only the censor's stamp. In the first combat battalions, the postcards were thrown into the civilian mailboxes and distributed to the homes by volunteer youth, and some of these postcards were issued without a stamp