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Is there a very effective way to distinguish the authenticity of old cigarette labels, which most people don't know?
1, old standard: mostly in pinyin and foreign languages, and the patterns mainly reflect the social background and culture at that time. Most of these items are collected through price purchase and rarely through exchange.

2. Early labels: mainly soft labels, which refer to tobacco labels from the founding of the People's Republic of China to the appearance of tobacco labels in China. It is characterized by many traditional Chinese characters, including public-private partnerships and local state-owned ones.

3. China cigarette label: It means that the name of the factory on the cigarette case is only printed with "Produced by China Tobacco Industry Company", and about 6 1 cigarette factories in China use this name at the same time. From 1963, China Tobacco Industry Company was established until 1968, when the company was cancelled. There are about 1000 kinds of cigarette labels, which are loved by collectors because they are the products of special periods.

4. Cultural Revolution labels: mainly soft labels, 1966 to 1975 produced during the Cultural Revolution. It is characterized by quotations from the chairman, inscriptions, revolutionary slogans and cigarette labels with specific patterns during the Cultural Revolution.

5. "Three non-standards" refers to the cigarette trademarks produced by various cigarette factories (companies) in China in the late 1960s, 1970s and early 1980s. Its name is "three no standards", which is different from "R, tar content, smoke type" appearing on cigarette labels in the mid-1980s. 1987+ 10, China tobacco corporation stipulated that production enterprises should mark tar content grade, and mark "r" and smoke type in advance.

The third non-standard is: no "R, tar content, smoke type"; Or "no tar content, no R, no filter tip"? Is the identification mark of "three noes" a cigarette type or a filter tip? Novices who collect cigarette labels are often confused. The correct answer should be the type of cigarette.

Because filters have existed since the late 1970s, they cannot be used as a sign of the end of an era. Tobacco varieties such as R and tar content signs all appeared in the middle and late 1980s, marking the end of the Cultural Revolution and the nonstandard cigarette labels in the early days of reform and opening up. Generally, there are three standards of "R, tar content and flue gas type", indicating that it is a product in the middle and late 1980s, and the earliest one is just the early 1980s. If these three labels are not included, they are cigarette labels before 1980s. After 1990s, almost all cigarette labels have these three labels (or one of them).

6. Unpacking (referring to the dismantled cigarette factory product label): 1986 The original cigarette factory product label ordered by China Tobacco Corporation to close, stop, merge and transfer before.