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The Postage Stamp - 4

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Robert Branston and Henry Archer's essay for a stamp based on the Penny Black, but featuring Albert, Prince Consort, 1851. This was to be printed by the dry letterpress process, to allow the sheets of stamps to be perforated by Archer's machine.

Stamp printing & perforations

The first stamps were cut individually from each sheet using scissors. The original form of stamp printing was recess, or intaglio. The paper was wetted during this printing process, and when the paper dried it shrank. This made it very difficult to achieve precise spacing between the labels on a sheet, which hampered mechanical separation.

Between 1847 and 1850 Henry Archer had been developing a machine that would punch out perforation holes to separate individuals stamps on a sheet. Archer advocated printing the stamps by letterpress, a dry printing process, avoiding the spacing problems caused by intaglio printing. 

In April 1851 Archer worked with Robert Branston, a well-known wood-engraver, to produce an essay based on the Penny Black but with the portrait of Albert, the Prince Consort. This stamp was printed letterpress and perforated on Archer’s machine. 

Although Archer and Branston failed to get the Treasury stamp contract they craved, letterpress printing came to be the standard Victorian technique for all stamp printing. The Prince Consort essay shown here can be regarded as the forerunner of later Victorian stamps.

Together with the Penny Black, the Prince Consort essay was turned into fantastic collages by pupils involved in The Penny Black Changed the World art workshops during June 2006. You can see what they did in the Kids Gallery.