?? Scott #487 is the only rotary type II, but it didn't come in Carmine Rose.
In the color Carmine the stamp can be purchased for $32.50
This is not an easy thing to do. Consult a postage stamp catalog and check the explanations at the front. They usually show how to determine the difference between rotary and flat plat printing. Careful measurements is the best way to tell.
A stamp is worth more unused
unused
Rotary printing is the most common production method for postage stamps today. In the early days of printing, a large flat plate was used to print a sheet at a time. Now that flat sheet has been curled into a cylinder which allows one to feed a continuous sheet of paper through the printing press. Even sheets can be fed through in a much more efficient way. There are some stamp issues that have been printed using more than one printing method. Others have been printed with the cylinder horizontal to the image and vertical to the image, creating a slight variation in the image size, even if the same master die was used. Identifying the printing method can make a difference in the value of a postage stamp. The US 1912-1918 series of stamps are an example of types that require careful study, particularly in the coil issues, as some of the flat plate varieties are very valuable, while the rotary are worth much less.
33 cents if unused.
About 25 cents
Litho in stamp collecting refers to the printing process called offset lithography.
Thirty-two cents.
If this stamp is in good condition - well centered, no missing parts, full gum if unused and lightly canceled if used, it retails for about $9 unused and $.20 used.
50 cents if unused. Nothing if used.This must be the most common US airmail stamp.
Yes. As long as the stamp was issued after 1867 and is still unused, it doesn't matter the denomination. It is still postage.
Not much maybe $1 or $3 at the most.