5392 (55¢) U.S.S. Missouri
5393 (55¢) Pres. George Herbert Walker Bush
5394 Sesame Street Characters pane of 16
a. (55¢) Big Bird
b. (55¢) Ernie
c. (55¢) Bert
d. (55¢) Cookie Monster
e. (55¢) Rosita
f. (55¢) The Count
g. (55¢) Oscar the Grouch
h. (55¢) Abby Cadabby
i. (55¢) Herry Monster
j. (55¢) Julia
k. (55¢) Guy Smiley
l. (55¢) Snuffleupagus
m. (55¢) Elmo
n. (55¢) Telly
o. (55¢) Grover
p. (55¢) Zoe
5395 (55¢) Pacific Tree Frog
5396 (55¢) Northern Leopard Frog
5397 (55¢) American Green Tree Frog
5398 (55¢) Squirrel Tree Frog
a. Convertible booklet pane of 20, 5 each #5395-5398
RW86 $25 Wood Duck and Decoy Hunting Permit Stamp, self-adhesive
RW86A $25 Wood Duck and Decoy Hunting Permit Stamp, self-adhesive, souvenir sheet of 1
So, is this issue a souvenir sheet? Scott has assigned letters to each individual stamp, with the whole pane getting the Scott number! The Ellsworth Kelly issue was assigned a Scott number for each of individual stamps on the pane
You’re referring to Sesame Street, Richard?
According to Marty Frankevicz of Scott Publishing (Amos Media), the stamps in the Ellsworth Kelly (booklet) pane get individual numbers because each pane has two blocks of 10 stamps, or the designs are repeated twice in each pane. The Sesame Street designs are not repeated within the pane.
Sesame Street is just a pane of stamps, not a souvenir sheet.
So I am guessing that the Scott numbering scheme has changed over the years? Some full panes of stamps, the 1976 Bicentennial State Flags comes to mind (and other full panes) have individual Scott numbers assigned to them and not letters.
I apologize for bringing up the Ellsworth Kelly issue as an example, I realized that this was not a full pane of different designs.
Richard, everything changes over 40+ years. Stamp collecting overall has certainly changed, right?