BNA Exhibits from BNAPS Members
new material: December 20, 2006


Criteria for presenting exhibits on this website

Tips for preparing pdf exhibits for this website

BNAPS Exhibition Judging Guidelines

Title Page vs. Synopsis (Why are they different, what are their uses and THEIR construction) provided by Tim Bartshe and AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF PHILATELIC EXHIBITORS
[ppt presentation,large file];
[text presentation, small file]

Synopsis Preparation (from the PNW regional group)

Go to the exhibits.

Members of the British North America Philatelic Society are invited to present short exhibits of BNA material they have developed, including exhibits that have been submitted to regional or national shows. These web pages are available to all Internet viewers, so members are urged to keep that in mind.

In order to view some items, you must have Adobe Acrobat Reader installed. The files used here have been made compatible with Acrobat 5.0 and later. Click the button below to download.

Go right to the exhibits.

BNAPS MEMBERS' BNA EXHIBITS

One-frame Exhibits:

Cross-border Mail via the Cunard Line (1.9 MB) - David D'Alessandris

1c Yellow Large Queen (0.5 MB) - Vic Willson

RPO Usage on the Manitoba & North Western Railway (1.4 MB) - Bob Lane

RPOs on the Mysterious Estevan Line (2 MB) - Bob Lane

Edward and Alexandra (2 MB) - Norris (Bob) Dyer

The West of Winnipeg RPO Hammers (1.4 MB) - Bob Lane

19TH Century Brandon Post Office Postmarks (1.5 MB) - Bob Lane

Multi-frame Exhibits

Internal Mail of Prince Edward Island - Mike Salmon (4 frames)

frame 1
frame 2
frame 3
frame 4

Postal History and Usages of the Canada Post Card 1871-1928 - Vic Willson

frame 1
frame 2
frame 3
frame 4
frame 5
frame 6
frame 7
frame 8

Railway Post Office Postmarks in Southern Manitoba (3 frames) - Bob Lane

CPR-Part1 (Pembina Line, Deloraine Line)

CPR-Part2 (Glenboro Line, Estevan Line, Gretna Line)

CNoR-Part1 (East-West lines)

CNoR-Part2 (Red River and Ontario lines)

Mail by Rail on Both Sides of the Manitoba/USA Border (2 frames) - Bob Lane

First File (1.5 MB)
Second File (2.5 MB)
Third File (1.5 MB)


MISCELLANEOUS EXHIBITS

  • An interesting exhibit of "Sailing Tables for the Pacific" is found on the PHSC website, prepared by Gray Scrimgeour.

  • "Marked For Life", a terrific article about a collector's adventure with postal history was published in Vancouver in May, 2006. Now Andrew Scott's article is available for viewing on this website.

  • BRANDON EXHIBIT postal history exhibit has been prepared for the general public and was developed to help Brandon, Manitoba celebrate its 125th anniversary as a city, in 2007. Brandon has some significance to Canadian postal history. Members are encouraged to offer similar projects for this site.

  • JORY COLLECTION Brandon University has, in its archives, a wonderful collection of over 400 Manitoba covers, mostly from the 19th century. BNAPS and Brandon University have worked together to present those covers on the Internet.

  • STINSON FLIGHT Re-Enactment of Western Canada's First Air Mail Flight.

  • Two covers to help us celebrate the ALBERTA AND SAKATCHEWAN CENTENNIALS provided by Gray Scrimgeour.

  • The BNAPS "COVER OF THE MONTH".

  • The Calgary "COVERS" exhibit.

  • An extraordinary CANADIAN cover!

  • The BNAPS cover CHALLENGE


    CRITERIA

    The BNAPS webmaster will not actively solicit contributions but will post all contributions that meet the following criteria:

  • material must be owned by the contributor, who shall provide his/her membership number and a statement that BNAPS is authorized to present the material on the Internet.

  • owner's names need not be shown but must be known to the webmaster. Owners can choose to have their email addresses included, in order to receive any questions or comments from viewers.

  • viewers wishing to pose questions or comments to exhibit owners that are not identified can submit such to the webmaster, for transmission.

  • exhibits of one or two frames can be submitted in .pdf format (see below). Exhibits larger than two frames should be submitted as multiple .pdf files (e.g. a 3-frame exhibit should be submitted as 3 separate .pdf files)

  • shorter contributions (e.g. a few covers or stamp images) can be submitted in a different format, subject to the agreement of the webmaster

  • the webmaster will not consider exhibits that contain inappropriate references to other collectors or judges. This is intended to be a pleasant and educational activity.


  • Preparation of Exhibits

    File sizes are a limiting factor in most Internet presentations. A page of text takes very little file space. A page with an image of a cover added to the text takes much more file space. A page that is presented entirely as an image takes even more file space.

    The example below, entitled: "19TH Century Brandon Post Office Postmarks" was developed as follows:

    1. The original exhibit was produced as a WORD document, with covers added to WORD pages using corner-holders.

    2. Each exhibit page was put in a scanner and just the images scanned and saved as separate image files (this takes a couple of minutes). Be sure to save your .jpg images at about "half strength" - this greatly reduces file sizes but the human eye cannot easily discern that loss of quality.

    3. Returning to the original WORD file (which includes text but not the covers), each image was added using the "Insert" command (this takes less than a minute).

    4. Process was repeated for all 16 pages (an hour, maybe), thus producing a new WORD file.

    5. A title page and the Synopsis were added to the front of the new WORD file. In this case the file size totalled over 23 MB, much too large for Internet presentation.

    6. The file was converted to an Acrobat .pdf file, which is about 1.5 MB in size. This was done using Adobe Acrobat but .pdf files can also be made from some word processors or with inexpensive software.

    7. If #6 is impossible, then owners can consult the webmaster about the option of mailing the file achieved at step #5 on a CD or DVD. The webmaster will convert it to .pdf format. Please DO NOT send material without prior consultation.

    Owners might be tempted to just scan their exhibit pages and convert them to .pdf. This is much easier but produces much larger files because all of every page is now an image. However, one can try this and see what file size results.


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