A rare stamp discovered by Napier philatelist Robin Gwynn sold for more than $300,000, after an expert once dismissed the tiny piece of nearly 160-year-old embossed paper as a fake.
The stamp had been hidden anonymously in an album Gwynn bought in Auckland on August 14, 2014, for $3300, his interest piqued by the fact that, dated 1876, it was the oldest album he'd ever come across in New Zealand.
Returning home to Hawke's Bay and discovering a stamp had been removed between his inspection of the album and the auction, he chose against returning it when he realised there were more than a dozen stamps or stationery cut-outs he'd never heard of.
In an international journey of discovery one turned out to be the first Russian stamp, the Tiflis — a discovery of moderate interest for, he said, he had no interest in Russian stamps.
A US expert initially certified it as fake, but it became a philatelic wonder after an out-of-the-blue offer of £5000 led to him learning it was the genuine article, the first worldwide to surface in more than 80 years.