GIBRALTAR STAMPS OFFER: SPEND £50 GET £5 OFF
Shipping: Shipping fees start from GBP £6.91

2020Romanian Collections Phonographs - Set

Set
GBP £5.76
Official Price Guaranteed
(item in basket)
Other products in issue
Set
GBP £5.76
Miniature Sheet
GBP £4.97
Sheetlets
GBP £46.07
First Day Cover
GBP £11.87
Special Folder
GBP £50.61
Full sheets
GBP £74.87
Technical details
  • 25.02.2020
  • Ion Chirescu
  • -
  • -
  • Offset
  • 4 Colours
  • Stamp size: 36 x 36 mm; Minisheet of 8 stamps + 1 label + 6 tabs: 144 x 128 mm; Minisheet of 13 stamps + 2 different labels + 10 tabs: 140 x 205 mm; Perforated souvenir sheet: 94 x 94 mm (stamps size:42 x 52 mm) Special perforated souvenir sheet (in ph
  • 1,80L, 1,90L, 2 L, 3.30 L, 5 L, 19 L and 28,50 L (souvenir sheet)
Thematics
About Romanian Collections Phonographs

Romfilatelia dedicates a new postage stamps issue to the Romanian Collections series, entitled Phonographs that will be introduced into circulation, on Tuesday, 25th of February, current year.
On the postage stamps images are reproduced of exhibits belonging to a renowned collection from Bucharest, the biggest in the world, certified in the Guinness World Records in 2016. These can be admired in an organized exhibition space at the Museum of Romanian Records.
On the postage stamp with the face value of Lei 1.80, the Fondain Ducretet phonograph is represented. This phonograph is one of the first such devices used for sound recording, being created around 1880. The way it works is different from most of the phonographs we know at present, because the recording medium was a special one. Thus, the recording was done on a tinfoil, fitted on the cylinder. The user of the device had to speak loudly in the small horn and rotate the cylinder at a constant speed.
The Edison Home Phonograph is represented on the postage stamp with the face value of Lei 1.90. This phonograph model was created towards the end of 1896 and has been a successful device. The sound recording for this device was made using wax cylinders. The advantage of these cylinders made by Edison’s company was that they could be reused. In the United Kingdom, phonographs have been sold by Edison Bell, which is responsible for both the production and marketing of the devices and the maintenance of patents.
On the postage stamp with the face value of Lei 2 the Edison Bell phonograph with glass horn has been graphically illustrated. What is truly remarkable about this phonograph is its glass horn. The sound it plays is a special one and the fact that the horn is intact makes this piece very rare.
The Amberola Phonograph is graphically represented on the postage stamp with the face value Lei 3.30. This type of phonograph, created by Thomas Edison himself, dates back to 1918 and is different from other phonographs in that the horn is incorporated. Thus, the device no longer has an external, removable horn, but rather a resonance box for amplifying the sound.
The Lioret Phonograph, featured on the postage stamp with the face value of Lei 5, produced in France by Lioret in 1896 is a very rare piece. Few such phonographs were made and far fewer survived the passage of time. Henri Lioret was an important name in the music industry in France, managing to create talking dolls, in which he mounted celluloid cylinders. These cylinders were also used for his phonographs, intended for adults. Unlike wax cylinders, those made by Lioret from celluloid were much less demanding in terms of their use and storage. They were also much smaller in size, but still allowed somewhere within two minutes of playback. The mechanisms and engines of Lioret’s pieces are remarkable, and his phonographs are very difficult to find at present, being among the rarest pieces.

[read more]