


With the Digital Subscription is packed with features simply not possible in print, like search and zoom. Better yet, they offer unprecedented efficiency thanks to a powerful features that lets you search topics across multiple countries. No internet connection required.Įach year, we publish a brand new printed edition consisting of updates from the prior year.ĭigital Subscriptions. We offer a Digital Subscription of each essential volume of The Scott Catalogue, including Volume 3. We've separated each volume into two books (Volume 3 A & Volume 3 B) to make each book lighter and easier to browse through and transport. We continue the proud tradition of publishing our printed, full-size, full-color catalogs on premium stock for your enjoyment. We've made The Scott Catalogue available in both Print and Digital formats for your convenience. Volume 3 is updated annually and the new listings are released in June of each year. The resulting value is included alongside the listing. We then catalog each stamp, (scanning a high-resolution image of it using state-of-the-art scanning technology), assign in at Scott Number and then our valuing analysts research its value. Our team scours the globe hunting down all new issues and obtaining stamps from prior periods, across all the countries of the world where stamps are issued. The catalogs, in publication since 1868, are updated annually by our expert team of philatelists. This volume is the third of six essential volumes of the Scott Standard Catalogue of Postage Stamps. Learn more about illegal stamps here.Scott Catalogue Volume 3 (Countries G-I) Volume 3 of the Scott Standard Catalogue of Postage Stamps If you are looking for a country in English and don't know what its Dutch name is or don't know what name to look for on the stamp, you can find it here: names of countries (opens in new window or tab).Īlways be careful with stamps from certain countries which are notorious for issueing illegal stamps. The pdf-files below open in a new window or tab. These catalogues also give information about circulation numbers, variations in colour or size or perforation and watermarks. For these you are referred to official trade catalogues, like Michel, Yvert et Tellier, Scott, Domfil or Stanley Gibbons.

And you can always use Google Translate to find out what this Dutch gibberish and occasional German means. That was too much work, but the images speak for themselves. I compiled them for myself and therefore not everything has been translated into English. All of the pdf-files below are continuously updated. These country catalogues were made in Dutch.
