Wow!!!! Kyler's collection is impressive and very neat! I loved to get a peek into it. I liked the beginning of his GB collection. Thanks so much Rob and Kyler. It will be neat to see more of Kyler's collection.
@@ThatStampGuy you have a great name lol. I will have to look you up. Perhaps there is a collaboration option in the future That Dad Guy and That Stamp Guy 😊
I've actually never laid eyes on such beautiful stamps. So so impressive! Thanks Rob and Kyler. I've covered a lot of PEI over the years but never saw that gorgeous church.
Impressive collection! I particularly enjoyed seeing the early British issues - of which I only have a few - and the various Bhutan stamps of the 60's and 70's, which I only have a small handful of. The stamps of places like Bhutan, Mongolia and Liberia are what got me hooked as a youngster. Those were strange, mysterious places to the 8-year old me, and I stared at those stamps with utter fascination. Those types of stamps are usually scoffed at by most quote-unquote "serious" collectors today, but I'm betting they ensnared far more youngsters into the hobby back in the day than all of the "dead statesmen" types put together. Using the worldwide volumes you do keeps things relatively compact, and I like how you're able to keep things neat and organized. My attempts at using pages like those always seem to end up with stamps all over the place in a disorganized fashion. I collect the world as well, mostly using "print your own" pages. While that's a very cost effective solution as compared to buying pre-printed pages, it's not very efficient with space and I'm at over 100 binders taking up an entire wall of a spare bedroom, leading me to question my very sanity at times. For most countries, I cut off my collection somewhere around the years 2000-2010 or so, with Japan being the only country I continue to collect current (used) issues. I've taken to using Vario stock pages for those, since printed pages tend to have spaces for the entire (unused) sheet, and mounting singles in those spaces is kind of awkward and, in my opinion, unattractive. Vario pages help me keep things neat, clean and organized. Anyway, thanks for the great video. Keep up the great work.
@@stevenbecker5571 kyler has a wonderful collection of stamps and you are right the unusual and fun stamps are what interest younger people. Having a 100 binders your collection must be equally impressive. I love doing interviews like this one to show different people collect and what interests them. Thank you for watching
You are collecting a long time, when looking at your collection. With the variety of areas it is not boring, you have modern and old stamps. A really nice collection, I liked it.
What a fantastic collection. I also collect worldwide but only up through 1969 and am having problems finding some stamps but then I only collect mint. I cannot imagine collecting in the 70's and 80's. I am truly impressed. Unlike Kyler, I have Minkus Supreme Global albums in 12 volumes which pictures a lot of stamps that Scott does not list so I am always hunting for non-Scott listed stamps. I remember being a kid, walking into a stamp store and seeing the 3D Bhutan space stamps and thinking that they were the coolest stamps. I am still missing 28 Canadian stamps but they all catalogue over $100 and since I am probably too old to marry well that will probably be all for Canada for me. It is not my fault that I was born pretty instead of rich. Lol! Kyler, do you collect Canadian Plate Blocks? I have already asked Rob and he does not. I have four of L M Montgomery's novels. I would love to see more of Kyler's collection.
Hi Robert, Thank you for your comment on Rob's video. Bhutan certainly did issue a lot of interesting stamps in the 60's and 70's. The first ones that I had from there that were different were the scented rose stamps from 1973. I don't collect plate blocks either - just singles and souvenir sheets.
Question ... I picked up from an antique seller of things from France, 3 boxes of stamps from the 2nd and 3rd Republic of France. They are in 3 separate boxes and each box has probably 100+ stamps in it. What do you recommend I do with them besides sort them and find an album for them? Should I take them to be evaluated? As a newbie, I'm kinda overwhelmed and don't know exactly what I have. I googled some and matched pictures and some are selling for $100+ but I don't know if that's reliable. Gah. PS - Thanks Rob for the CA stamps for my collection.
@thatdadguy1974 I want to keep them but I also want to k own the significance of what it is that I have stumbled upon. Is there like a name for an expert I could find in my area that would know? Being new, I don't know what exactly to do with them other than find one of those books like are shown in this video and put them in there.
Wow!!!! Kyler's collection is impressive and very neat! I loved to get a peek into it. I liked the beginning of his GB collection. Thanks so much Rob and Kyler. It will be neat to see more of Kyler's collection.
Well perhaps one day we will see more of the collection
Thank you!
Awesome stamp collection!
Thank you! :)
@@TulioSantosnet very impressive
Fantastic stamp collection Kyler.
@@billyjohnesterhuizen6340 thanks for watching
As a stamp video creator myself, I found this to be a great video and topic. Hope to see more from your channel soon! 🔎✉️🎬
@@ThatStampGuy you have a great name lol. I will have to look you up. Perhaps there is a collaboration option in the future That Dad Guy and That Stamp Guy 😊
I've actually never laid eyes on such beautiful stamps. So so impressive! Thanks Rob and Kyler. I've covered a lot of PEI over the years but never saw that gorgeous church.
@@wendybilling2417 he is a wonderful tour guide and has an impressive stamp collection
Thank you!
Interesting to see a multi-volume worldwide collector and how they mounted/organized their collection!
He does a fantastic job with his collection
WOW!!!
@@DavidClairmont-bz6sk great collection
Very impressive stamp collection. Thanks Kylera nd Rob for letting us have a peek into Aladdin's cave of marvels.
I am sure there is much more to uncover, perhaps at another occasion
Thank you!
Another good video. Amazing stamp collection. I like album 2.
@@idamariegiusti3615 A life’s passion
Thank you! :)
Impressive collection! I particularly enjoyed seeing the early British issues - of which I only have a few - and the various Bhutan stamps of the 60's and 70's, which I only have a small handful of. The stamps of places like Bhutan, Mongolia and Liberia are what got me hooked as a youngster. Those were strange, mysterious places to the 8-year old me, and I stared at those stamps with utter fascination. Those types of stamps are usually scoffed at by most quote-unquote "serious" collectors today, but I'm betting they ensnared far more youngsters into the hobby back in the day than all of the "dead statesmen" types put together.
Using the worldwide volumes you do keeps things relatively compact, and I like how you're able to keep things neat and organized. My attempts at using pages like those always seem to end up with stamps all over the place in a disorganized fashion.
I collect the world as well, mostly using "print your own" pages. While that's a very cost effective solution as compared to buying pre-printed pages, it's not very efficient with space and I'm at over 100 binders taking up an entire wall of a spare bedroom, leading me to question my very sanity at times. For most countries, I cut off my collection somewhere around the years 2000-2010 or so, with Japan being the only country I continue to collect current (used) issues. I've taken to using Vario stock pages for those, since printed pages tend to have spaces for the entire (unused) sheet, and mounting singles in those spaces is kind of awkward and, in my opinion, unattractive. Vario pages help me keep things neat, clean and organized.
Anyway, thanks for the great video. Keep up the great work.
@@stevenbecker5571 kyler has a wonderful collection of stamps and you are right the unusual and fun stamps are what interest younger people.
Having a 100 binders your collection must be equally impressive. I love doing interviews like this one to show different people collect and what interests them.
Thank you for watching
Looks like Crystal Mounts in the Canada album. Nice interview TDG.
@@tedtalksstamps thank you Ted. Hope things are going well at your new place in Portugal. Maybe one day we can figure out a Collaboration
@@thatdadguy1974 Things are, indeed, going well here. I'd love to do a collab one day.
@@tedtalksstamps we will have to figure out how that will work. In a shared live stream or interview video format
beautiful .... such a wonderful, cheerful man ... he deserves more TH-cam mileage, and should start his own channel too.
He certainly is a good interview
Thank you for your kind words Basil! :)
@@kylerbowness4994 Would love to send you some Sri Lankan Stamps
You are collecting a long time, when looking at your collection. With the variety of areas it is not boring, you have modern and old stamps. A really nice collection, I liked it.
@@olivermiller2013 thank you for watching
What a fantastic collection. I also collect worldwide but only up through 1969 and am having problems finding some stamps but then I only collect mint. I cannot imagine collecting in the 70's and 80's. I am truly impressed. Unlike Kyler, I have Minkus Supreme Global albums in 12 volumes which pictures a lot of stamps that Scott does not list so I am always hunting for non-Scott listed stamps. I remember being a kid, walking into a stamp store and seeing the 3D Bhutan space stamps and thinking that they were the coolest stamps. I am still missing 28 Canadian stamps but they all catalogue over $100 and since I am probably too old to marry well that will probably be all for Canada for me. It is not my fault that I was born pretty instead of rich. Lol! Kyler, do you collect Canadian Plate Blocks? I have already asked Rob and he does not. I have four of L M Montgomery's novels. I would love to see more of Kyler's collection.
Perhaps we will see more another time should he be so kind. It is good that got to be born pretty some of us don't get to be either hahaha
Hi Robert, Thank you for your comment on Rob's video. Bhutan certainly did issue a lot of interesting stamps in the 60's and 70's. The first ones that I had from there that were different were the scented rose stamps from 1973. I don't collect plate blocks either - just singles and souvenir sheets.
Question ... I picked up from an antique seller of things from France, 3 boxes of stamps from the 2nd and 3rd Republic of France. They are in 3 separate boxes and each box has probably 100+ stamps in it. What do you recommend I do with them besides sort them and find an album for them? Should I take them to be evaluated? As a newbie, I'm kinda overwhelmed and don't know exactly what I have. I googled some and matched pictures and some are selling for $100+ but I don't know if that's reliable. Gah. PS - Thanks Rob for the CA stamps for my collection.
I guess it depends what you want to do with them. Sell them or save them
@thatdadguy1974 I want to keep them but I also want to k own the significance of what it is that I have stumbled upon. Is there like a name for an expert I could find in my area that would know? Being new, I don't know what exactly to do with them other than find one of those books like are shown in this video and put them in there.
@@tashalinton1028 i would suggest you google your area then to see if you had a stamp dealer who might take a look at them for evaluation