Line pair

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[edit] In philately

Joint line pair, US 1917; note the misalignment of the stamps
Joint line pair, US 1917; note the misalignment of the stamps
Guide line pair, US ca 1908
Guide line pair, US ca 1908

In philately, a line pair is a coil pair of postage stamps bearing an inked line between the two stamps. There are at least two kinds of these.

A guide line pair has a guide line between the stamps. Since the guide lines are deliberately incised into the plate, they will generally be sharp and clear.


A joint line pair has a joint line between the stamps, deriving from the seam in the cylindrical plate used to print the stamps. These lines are somewhat smeared in appearance.



[edit] In image processing

In image processing, the description of a line pair is this: on a test pattern consisting of closely spaced black parallel lines on a white background, a line pair is one black line together with the white space on one side of it. When photographers say "lines of resolution", they mean line pairs. In television and video, one line pair equals two TV lines or pixels, of resolution.