New to LastDodo?See how it works
New here? LastDodo is rated
99.2% positive in 685,793 shop reviews. Find out how it works
  • Catalogue
  • Marketplace
  • Community
  • EN
    NederlandsEnglishFrançaisDeutsch
  • Shopping cart of:
    Shopping cart

    The shopping cart is currently empty.

  • Sign inFrequently Asked Questions
    Sign in
  • Catalogue
  • Marketplace
  • Community
  • Stamps
  • Comic books
  • Coins
  • Books
  • Music
  • Film
  • Postcards
  • Trading cards
  • Cigar bands
  • Model cars
  • Tea bags
  • All areas (75)
    All areas
    • A
    • Album pictures(142,345)
    • Alcohol / beverages(7,832)
    • Audiovisual equipment(1,218)
    • Autographs(5,480)
    • B
    • Badges(4,461)
    • Banknotes(29,493)
    • Beer labels(74,431)
    • Beer mats(147,229)
    • Board games(15,128)
    • Bookmarks(3,659)
    • Books(486,752)
    • C
    • Calculators(1,698)
    • Cans / tins(9,319)
    • Caps and Pogs(19,927)
    • Car brochures(10,612)
    • Ceramics(5,597)
    • Cigar labels(287,071)
    • Clocks and alarm clocks(622)
    • Coins(103,538)
    • Collection albums(5,258)
    • Comic books(646,719)
    • Comic ex-libris and prints(42,688)
    • Creamer cup lids(24,232)
    • Crown Caps(8,867)
    • D
    • Dolls and bears(3,491)
    • Drawings / paintings(30,321)
    • DVD / Video / Blu-ray(92,675)
    • E
    • Enamel signs(826)
    • Entrance tickets(3,017)
    • F
    • Figures and statuettes(90,931)
    • Fossils(328)
    • G
    • Gift cards(27,271)
    • J
    • Jewellery(3,148)
    • Jigsaw puzzles(7,642)
    • K
    • Keychains(9,254)
    • Kitchenware & tableware(19,266)
    • L
    • Lighters(6,578)
    • M
    • Magazines / newspapers(283,171)
    • Maps and globes(2,958)
    • Markclips(33,269)
    • Match Programmes(5,700)
    • Matchcovers(93,794)
    • Minicards(18,562)
    • Model cars and scale model(79,758)
    • Model trains / Railway modelling(12,358)
    • N
    • Naturalia(6,999)
    • P
    • Perfins(12,517)
    • Perfume bottles(9,007)
    • Phone cards(110,555)
    • Photo and video cameras(5,841)
    • Picture stamps(8,052)
    • Pins and buttons(100,585)
    • Postcards(415,338)
    • Posters(11,206)
    • Prints / graphics(5,943)
    • R
    • Records and CDs(257,050)
    • Revenue stamps(6,098)
    • Rolling papers(3,720)
    • S
    • Securities and bonds(1,546)
    • Stamps(944,601)
    • Stationery(3,801)
    • Stickers(34,829)
    • Sugar sachets(57,748)
    • T
    • Tea bags(150,481)
    • Telephones(263)
    • Templates and molds(3,819)
    • Thimbles(2,703)
    • Tokens / Medals(23,133)
    • Toy soldiers(20,001)
    • Toys(14,150)
    • Trading cards(246,856)
    • V
    • Vases & flowerpots(3,501)
    • Video games(21,799)
    • W
    • Watches(3,113)
    • Wine(2,655)
  1. Home
  2. Catalogue
  3. Stamps
  4. Printing techniques
  5. Steel engraving

Steel engraving stamp catalogue

84,234 items

United States United States Etats-Unis Vereinigte Staaten  More

Steel engraving

FLAT PLATE PRINTING in the United States and territories under the jurisdiction or administration of the United States.

Flat plate press was initially used for printing all stamps of the United States. The first engraved plates used for this purpose in 1847 contained 200 subjects. The number of subjects to a plate varied between 100 and 300 until the issue of 1890, when the 400-subject plate was first laid down. Since that time, this size of plate has been used for a majority of the regular postal issues (those other than commemoratives).

Most stamps were printed and sold by postmasters in whole sheets, which means that sheets, per se, are not uncommon. Because the resulting sizes were often so large as to make them unwieldy, these large sheets were typically cut into counter sheets, also called panes.

The sheets of many classic US stamps had only two panes, many of the Bureau issues had four panes, while modern sheets may have six or more panes. A white margin surrounds the stamps on the four sides.

Voids called gutters separated the panes, giving printers waste-free areas within which to make their cuts. When it comes to the traditional, perforated sheets, collectors look for the colored sheet numbers in the margin or gutter, which can identify a sheet by its plate block, as well as its print run.

In a typical 400-subject plate there were guide-lines: horizontal or vertical colored lines, extending wholly or partially across the sheet. They serve as guides for the operators of perforating machines or to indicate the point of separation of the sheet into panes.

When guide lines are used to mark the division of the sheet into panes, the space between the stamps at the edge of the pane is no different than the space between any other stamps on the sheet. Some plates provide a wide space, or gutter, between the panes. These plates do not produce guidelines.

As a result of cutting sheets in two or four panes, these panes always contain two imperforate sides:

Pane 1: one on the right side and one at the bottom;

Pane 2: one on the right side and one at the top;

Pane 3: one on the left side and one at the bottom;

Pane 4: one on the left side and one on the top

Stamps in the corners always have two sides imperforate.

The rotary press printing was developed in 1910 and first production took place in 1914. Because of the curved plates of the rotary press cylinders, the rotary impressions are somewhat larger.

Sources of information:

Scott Specialized Catalog of United States Stamps & Covers

Stanley Gibbons Stamp Catalog part 22 United States

https://www.collectorsweekly.com/stamps/sheets

https://postalmuseum.si.edu/library

https://www.theswedishtiger.com/

https://stampsmarter.org/index.html

NB The use of illustrations isn't yet available on this background page. Those illustrations would have been very useful and would have made the text more understandable.

Automatic translation Click here for the original text
Hide original text

FLAT PLATE PRINTING in the United States and territories under the jurisdiction or administration of the United States.

Flat plate press was initially used for printing all stamps of the United States. The first engraved plates used for this purpose in 1847 contained 200 subjects. The number of subjects to a plate varied between 100 and 300 until the issue of 1890, when the 400-subject plate was first laid down. Since that time, this size of plate has been used for a majority of the regular postal issues (those other than commemoratives).

Most stamps were printed and sold by postmasters in whole sheets, which means that sheets, per se, are not uncommon. Because the resulting sizes were often so large as to make them unwieldy, these large sheets were typically cut into counter sheets, also called panes.

The sheets of many classic U.S. stamps had only two panes, many of the Bureau issues had four panes, while modern sheets may have six or more panes. A white margin surrounds the stamps on the four sides.

Voids called gutters separated the panes, giving printers waste-free areas within which to make their cuts. When it comes to the traditional, perforated sheets, collectors look for the colored sheet numbers in the margin or gutter, which can identify a sheet by its plate block, as well as its print run.

In a typical 400-subject plate there were guide-lines: horizontal or vertical colorde lines, extending wholly or partially across the sheet. They serve as guides for the operators of perforating machines or to indicate the point of separation of the sheet into panes.

When guide lines are used to mark the division of the sheet into panes, the space between the stamps at the edge of the pane is no different than the space between any other stamps on the sheet. Some plates provide a wide space, or gutter, between the panes. These plates do not produce guide lines.

As a result of cutting sheets in two or four panes, these panes always contain two imperforate sides:

Pane 1: one on the right side and one at the bottom;

Pane 2: one on the right side and one at the top;

Pane 3: one on the left side and one at the bottom;

Pane 4: one on the left side and one on the top

Stamps in the corners always have two sides imperforate.

The rotary press printing was developed in 1910 and first production took place in 1914. Because of the curved plates of the rotary press cylinders, the rotary impressions are somewhat larger.

Sources of information:

Scott Specialized Catalogue of United States Stamps & Covers

Stanley Gibbons Stamp Catalogue part 22 United States

https://www.collectorsweekly.com/stamps/sheets

https://postalmuseum.si.edu/library

https://www.theswedishtiger.com/

https://stampsmarter.org/index.html

N.B. The use of illustrations isn’t yet available on this background page. Those illustrations would have been very useful and would have made the text more understandable.


Number of stamps
84,234
Number of related items
0
Oldest item
Queen Victoria (1840)
Latest item
French Red Cross (2025)
Most expensive item
Kingdom of Naples - Coat of Arms (€ 500,000.00)
Date of entry:November 25, 2022 22:59by:Loriot
Last updated :January 16, 2023 17:21by:Loriot

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • ..
  • 1404
  • >
84,234 selected
Queen Victoria, Penny Black
Queen Victoria, Penny Black
  • 1840
  • 1
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria
  • 1840
  • 2
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria
  • 1840
Queen Victoria - Penny Black
Queen Victoria - Penny Black
  • 1840
  • 1
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria
  • 1840
  • 1
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria
  • 1841
  • 1
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria
  • 1841
  • 2
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria
  • 1841
Queen Victoria
Queen Victoria
  • 1841
  • 2
Bull's Eye
Bull's Eye
  • 1843
  • 30
Bull's Eye
Bull's Eye
  • 1843
  • 60
Bull's Eye
Bull's Eye
  • 1843
  • 90
Figure "himynameisguy"
Figure "himynameisguy"
  • 1846
  • 10
Figure "himynameisguy"
Figure "himynameisguy"
  • 1844
  • 30
Figure "geitenoog"
Figure "geitenoog"
  • 1844
  • 60
"Goat's eye" figure
"Goat's eye" figure
  • 1844
  • 90
"Goat's eye" figure
"Goat's eye" figure
  • 1845
  • 180
Foundng Fathers, with inscription "POST OFFICE"
€ 
5,000
Foundng Fathers, with inscription "POST OFFICE"
  • 1847
  • 5
Founding Fathers, with inscription "POST OFFICE"
€ 
2,000
Founding Fathers, with inscription "POST OFFICE"
  • 1847
  • 10
Founding Fathers, with inscription "POST OFFICE"
Founding Fathers, with inscription "POST OFFICE"
  • 1847
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
€ 
3,500
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
  • 1849
  • 10
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
€ 
5,000
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
  • 1849
  • 20
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
€ 
7,100
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
  • 1849
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
€ 
4,100
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
  • 1849
  • 10
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
€ 
4,100
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
  • 1849
  • 20
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
King Leopold I "Epaulettes"
  • 1849
  • 20
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
3,300
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1850
  • 10
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
2,800
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1850
  • 20
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
2,800
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1849
  • 40
King Leopold I "Medallions"
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1849
Figure "Cat's eye"
€ 
110
Figure "Cat's eye"
  • 1850
  • 20
Figure "Cat's eye"
€ 
14
.
00
Figure "Cat's eye"
  • 1850
  • 30
Figure "Cat's eye"
€ 
14
.
00
Figure "Cat's eye"
  • 1850
  • 60
Figure "cat's eye"
€ 
120
Figure "cat's eye"
  • 1850
  • 90
Figure "Cat's eye"
Figure "Cat's eye"
  • 1850
  • 180
Figure "cat's eye"
Figure "cat's eye"
  • 1850
  • 300
Figure "cat's eye"
Figure "cat's eye"
  • 1850
  • 600
King Friedrich Wilhelm IV
€ 
4
.
10
King Friedrich Wilhelm IV
  • 1850
  • 1
King Friedrich Wilhelm IV
King Friedrich Wilhelm IV
  • 1850
  • 2
King Friedrich Wilhelm IV
King Friedrich Wilhelm IV
  • 1850
  • 3
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
700
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 10
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
875
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 20
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
9,500
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 40
King Leopold I "Medallions"
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
King Leopold I "Medallions"
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 10
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
975
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 10
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
1,100
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 10
King Leopold I "Medallions"
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1854
  • 10
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
1,250
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 20
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
1,400
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 20
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
2,200
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 20
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
70
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1854
  • 20
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
8,000
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 40
King Leopold I "Medallions"
€ 
6,900
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 40
King Leopold I "Medallions"
King Leopold I "Medallions"
  • 1851
  • 40
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
€ 
575
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
  • 1851
  • 1
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
€ 
4,250
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
  • 1851
  • 3
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
  • 1856
  • 5
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
€ 
1,800
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
  • 1855
  • 10
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
Founding Fathers, with inscription "U.S. POSTAGE"
  • 1851
  • 12
  • Get to know us
  • About LastDodo
  • Catalogue
  • Marketplace
  • Community
  • Subscriptions
  • Help
  • How does it work?
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Contact
  • Forum
  • Return and refund policy
  • Explore
  • Stamps buy and sell
  • Comic books buy and sell
  • Coins buy and sell
  • Books buy and sell
  • Music buy and sell
  • Film buy and sell
  • Postcards buy and sell
  • Trading cards buy and sell
  • Cigar bands buy and sell
  • Model cars buy and sell
© 2025 LastDodo
Terms of usePrivacy policyCookie policy