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TomGoodheart

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Everything posted by TomGoodheart

  1. TomGoodheart

    Hi From the UK

    Possibly W183 (Williamson's Trade Tokens Issued in the Seventeenth Century in England, Wales and Ireland, (1891) ) No illustration I'm afraid, but a possible mention: http://www.britishfarthings.com/Tokens/17th-Century/Wiltshire/Salisbury-01.html .
  2. TomGoodheart

    Hi From the UK

    The proofs are a bit modern for my taste. But I like the halfpenny. More like that please! And welcome! .
  3. TomGoodheart

    Oh the U.S. Market..

    I still find the price differences between a rare coin here and 'rare' coins there stunning at times. Not that I'm not happy for prices here to remain lower. I simply couldn't afford to collect what I do if I had to pay US prices.. so mustn't grumble, eh?
  4. TomGoodheart

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    A couple of times recently when I wasn't quite sure what I might receive (such has when the package seemed too light to contain a coin - it didn't, it was an invoice and the coin arrived the next day) I've used my phone to take a short video of me opening the package. Not a guaranteed means of protection, but I'm guessing it could be sent to eBay as evidence. Fortunately no nasty surprises for me, yet. Good luck Paul and let us know how it goes. .
  5. TomGoodheart

    Hello from a newbie

    Ah, glad you made it! Plenty to read here and of course, feel free to ask questions. And if you have photos of your coins you'd like to post we always like pictures! Tom
  6. TomGoodheart

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    People on Coin Community were suggesting a blowtorch! But, yes, heating by some means or other does sound quite possible. .
  7. TomGoodheart

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    Ak!!! Toned A small sample for those that don't want to click: .
  8. TomGoodheart

    Charles I Tower shillings

    Fashion I guess, though why blackamoor went out of fashion but negro remains acceptable I don't know. .
  9. TomGoodheart

    Charles I Tower shillings

    No I'm still collecting, or would be if only some nice coins would turn up! These aren't exactly surplus, in that they fill gaps in the Sharp number sequence. But I don't get the pleasure from them that I once did. It's the old story I'm afraid. The coins I'm prepared to sell aren't my nicest and the ones that would sell easily I don't want to part with! I really need a new type collector who wants to fill some of the gaps in their collection to come along, .. but I'm not sure if people collect Tower shillings that way any more! I'm afraid not Alan. I was lucky with mine as I managed to pick it up in a Stacks Bowers sale a couple of years ago. A poor photograph and it being unslabbed helped me I'm sure! I'll keep a look out for you though .. .
  10. TomGoodheart

    Charles I Tower shillings

    .
  11. TomGoodheart

    Charles I Tower shillings

    Spink 2800 Sharp G1/2 This first bust is very scarce with the Eye mint mark. £45 Spink 2791 Sharp E2/1 Scarcer with this earlier reverse. Bought York Coins 2004 £160 .
  12. TomGoodheart

    Charles I Tower shillings

    Spink 2799 Sharp G1_2 £280 Spink 2787 Sharp C2_2 ex Brooker 462 (this coin), Michael Sharp (and illustrated in his article in the BNJ XLVII 1977 p120 Plate VI #21) Extremely rare. I know of only two other examples. £400 .
  13. TomGoodheart

    Charles I Tower shillings

    Well, I still need that first £million, so if anyone is interested ... Spink 2793 Sharp E2_3 ex FS Dobbin Noble 101 Nov 2012 Lot #2051 (Part), previously Noble 80 Nov 2005 Lot #1622 £120 Spink 2799 Sharp G1_2 ex London Coins 148 Mar 2015 (part) Lot #1590 £160 .
  14. Yep, and get a do-it-yourself slab from eBay so it won't get lost or spent Good idea. I think in another recent thread it was mentioned that the price of undated 20ps had dropped from the original highs when their existence was first announced. The cost of having it graded and encapsulated is likely to equate to a fair proportion of the coin's value. Better to get the views of members here about the grade for free. Unless it's absolutely pristine I think the self-slab would then be the best option. Or there are coin capsules that would protect it just as well ... .
  15. Anyone know if Richard Castledine is still trading? Stock is mostly ancients and some hammered plus literature. I've had no response to my emails or a message I left on an answerphone and of course, websites last pretty much forever and it's difficult to tell when one was last updated ...
  16. TomGoodheart

    Slaney 2

    As Rob say, it's like collecting the coins themselves. Catalogues come up at auction occasionally. Or through specialist dealers. At times I've spent more time looking for catalogues than coins and I have no idea how long (and how much work) it must have taken Rob to build his library. And part of the problem for the likes of me is that earlier catalogues were often bound together with other sales. My copy of Raymond Carlyon-Britton's Edward I to Charles II sale was bound in with PWP's 1913 and 1916 sales plus EW Rashleigh's of 1909, making it a hefty volume to get posted from the US! .
  17. TomGoodheart

    Slaney 2

    Actually, probably it's just an ordinary photograph of the cast! The human brain is very good at interpreting what it expects to see: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sKa0eaKsdA0 So I suspect a (concave) photograph of a cast will be seen as a normal coin once printed, providing the lighting casts the shadows correctly. .
  18. TomGoodheart

    Slaney 2

    Don't whinge. You might be on the receiving end of some nice info one day. LOL I wasn't complaining Rob! I was just thinking it was odd from a money-making viewpoint!
  19. TomGoodheart

    Slaney 2

    Not the first time coins have been listed without. Seen it on dealer sites too. Personally I like to know as much as possible about a coin's 'collectable' history and I can't see it would do any harm. Perhaps it's just more work than they think it's worth putting in? But it feels like they're missing a trick there. The only people that benefit would appear to be the buyers who end up with a more interesting coin than the competition realised. Most unbusinesslike! .
  20. TomGoodheart

    Happy Birthday Clive

    Many happy returns from me too! .
  21. TomGoodheart

    Slaney 2

    Paraffin lamps were in more common use from the end of the 1850s I believe. They would have provided sufficient light for close work and certainly an improvement on candles. If it's red wax (or less commonly yellow) it's likely from where a cast was made of the coin. Then, to avoid the problems of different levels of reflectivity or toning the cast was photographed rather than the coin. It's not a guaranteed way to tell if a coin was illustrated in a sales catalogue (or possibly journal article) but it does suggest the possibility and that further research may be merited. In terms of dating, I guess we're talking about any illustrated catalogues prior to 1960 or so, is that about right Rob? Nice coin by the way Nicholas. Shame they don't make them like that any more. .
  22. In common with quite a few people I have been offered a free Microsoft 'upgrade' from my Win 7 OS to Windows 10. I wondered if anyone has any view on whether this is a Good Thing or not? I know W10 is in pre-release so a true comparison can't yet be made. But I deliberately chose 7 because I liked Vista and wanted something familiar when the only alternative was 8. As an aside, Wifey uses W 8.1 and gets on OK with it. But then she never wants to go to the Control Panel or do the things I like to do on my laptop. I guess it may be possible to revert to W7 afterwards, but as my laptop came pre-loaded and doesn't have a disk for Windows 7 I'm going to have to assume that this would be a one-way road. Any views welcome! .
  23. Hi sjh. Not something I know anything about I'm afraid but maybe someone will. In the meantime, here's an (the?) article. http://www.theguardian.com/money/2011/sep/09/old-coins-currency-minted-before-1947 But the article is from 2011 and I'm not sure if banks still do this. Why not send Chris (forum owner) a message and see if he has any more up-to-date info? Link through his profile: http://www.predecimal.com/forum/user/1-chris-perkins/ .
  24. I keep returning to look at this: In theory it has quite a bit going for it. Scarce (I know of 12 examples). With a decent provenance; ex Michael Sharp (and used by him as a example of the type in his BNJ paper (Vol 47, 1977, Plate vi #32)) subsequently bought by John Brooker (Brooker 485 and illustrated in SCBI 33 Plate XLVII) and then owned by Alan Morris (via Mark Senior). And yet it's not sold in over 2½ years and despite a price reduction ... Why? I can only assume because it's just not a very attractive coin. I find that interesting. And I suppose I feel a little sorry for the poor old thing, that it appears to have gone out of fashion, too! .
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