01 January (Niger ) within release Mushrooms (2023) goes into circulation Souvenir Sheet Mushrooms - Foil Coat of Arms face value 6,500 West African CFA franc
Souvenir Sheet Mushrooms - Foil Coat of Arms in catalogues | |
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Colnect codes: | Col: NE 2023-74 |
Souvenir Sheet is square format.
This item is produced for or by the counterfeit producer located in Moscow, Russia and distributed by criminal counterfeit stamp dealers located in Eastern Europe mainly in Kazakhstan and Estonia. It was created in 2024-5. The production of these counterfeits with foil stamps is massively being placed by the criminals in the name of several African countries. The counterfeit foil stamp used is placed on numerous versions of different series of backgrounds on different topics ranging from the Olympic games to Chess to famous people to Concorde and so forth. All topics consistently used by the counterfeiter in the past. The stamp itself is offered in varieties of gold foil, silver foil or bronze foil as shown in the second image of item NE 2023-01. Avoid anyone selling these!Also in the issue Mushrooms (2023):
Souvenir Sheet Mushrooms - Foil Coat of Arms it reflects the thematic directions:
A coat of arms is an heraldic visual design on an escutcheon (i.e. shield), surcoat, or tabard. The coat of arms on an escutcheon forms the central element of the full heraldic achievement which in its whole consists of shield, supporters, crest, and motto. A coat of arms is traditionally unique to an individual person, family (except in the United Kingdom), state, organisation or corporation.
A mushroom (or toadstool) is the fleshy, spore-bearing fruiting body of a fungus, typically produced above ground on soil or on its food source. The standard for the name "mushroom" is the cultivated white button mushroom, Agaricus bisporus; hence the word "mushroom" is most often applied to those fungi (Basidiomycota, Agaricomycetes) that have a stem (stipe), a cap (pileus), and gills (lamellae, sing. lamella) on the underside of the cap. These gills produce microscopic spores that help the fungus spread across the ground or its occupant surface. "Mushroom" describes a variety of gilled fungi, with or without stems, and the term is used even more generally, to describe both the fleshy fruiting bodies of some Ascomycota and the woody or leathery fruiting bodies of some Basidiomycota, depending upon the context of the word. Forms deviating from the standard morphology usually have more specific names, such as "bolete", "puffball", "stinkhorn", and "morel", and gilled mushrooms themselves are often called "agarics" in reference to their similarity to Agaricus or their order Agaricales. By extension, the term "mushroom" can also designate the entire fungus when in culture; the thallus (called a mycelium) of species forming the fruiting bodies called mushrooms; or the species itself.