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Everything posted by Rob
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Remarkable. How can so much drivel be written by just one person? Must stop wittering.
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Thinking about it, given the coincidental timing of the program and my graduation, that might have provided the inspiration.
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The day before graduation, our student accommodation was furnished with brand new signs saying Housing Units 1-28 and Housing Units 29-64. Unfortunately for the uni the letters were peelable. Come half ten that evening directions had been provided for 2 nuns 69ing in 8, sh*t housing and shi**ing nuns amongst other things. Every resident was fined a pound from their £10 deposit after the signs had been hastily removed.
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Adjustment Marks on Early Milled- Yay or Nay?
Rob replied to Conor44's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
It's horses for courses. If it appears on a common type coin, then it will do no harm to wait if you prefer one without adjustment marks. If the coin is difficult to obtain in high grade, then marks are likely to be increasingly acceptable. Once you reduce the grade to VF or so, then frankly it doesn't matter unless the coin is really difficult as an EF of most types should be available with patience. -
Adjustment Marks on Early Milled- Yay or Nay?
Rob replied to Conor44's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
It boils down to aesthetics. Can you live with them or not? I would choose to not have them with all other things being equal, but wouldn't refuse a coin just because it had adjustment marks. -
I can't see why opposing thoughts should be so problematic, yet it seems it was ever the case. Thrust and riposte are fundamental to not living in a reciprocating, back-slapping, echo-chamber. The whole point of not agreeing with everyone else is that alternative views can be espoused, taken on board and argued for or against. That's why open debate is so important. Anyone who frequented student unions in the 1970s will be fully aware of the way any dissenting ideas were shouted down by the left. I suspect nothing has changed given the tendency for youth to be left of centre.
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7.8 billion Jose Mourinhos! Perish the thought.
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It's wrong in just about every way possible. Beautiful - not. Nice color for the year - I prefer the green ones they made in 1964. Collectible coin - not. Desirable - not. The way they are supposed to look - not. Never met a toned coin collector - presumably means tanned? Why does he studiously avoid the warning on the label and make statements to the contrary? Only true bits are every collector loves beautiful coins, and to some extent, loves rare coins.
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Ah, so in an active post? I thought it might be something done previously that was stuck in memory somewhere and then came back to bite you.
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An explanation of how to get around this would be helpful in case it happens to others.
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1840 Sixpence - is there a small head variety?
Rob replied to Paddy's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
The top of the bun looks to be thinner on the new one - which again suggests polishing. -
Merely the latest event in a congenital problem for almost all politicians - living in their London-centric-Westminster bubble being the norm. Before the referendum in 2016, if they had gone into any Dog and Duck up and down the country and asked the people beforehand, they might have realised the need to make a real case for remain and persuade voters rather than assuming the masses would blindly follow their belief in armageddon and reject leave. Come 2019 the parallels are everywhere. No need to ask the people who aren't politically active, because we know they will vote for us as they have proved time and time again. They rest assured that the thousands of members will vote for which ever, whilst ignoring the volatile allegiances of the millions who are politically unaffilliated. One day they will realise that outside party constraints people are not on political auto-pilot. The referendum was only 3 years ago, not a political myth lost in the mists of time.
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1840 Sixpence - is there a small head variety?
Rob replied to Paddy's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
I think it is an illusion. Taking a straight line from the bases of various letters to the same points on the bust, the only (marginal) difference appears to be at the top of the head. It may be that the die field on the left has been polished to a greater extent than the one on the right. This would agree with there only being a vestige of the hair curl below the bun on the LH coin compared to the right. Alternatively, you could postulate that the left hand bust is sunk to a lesser degree on the die than the one on the right. -
Our constituency scraped home thanks to the (suspended) former Labour MP standing as an independent against them and also recommended people vote Conservative when canvassing. He resigned the whip over the anti-semitism question because he is Jewish and we have a large Jewish population in this area (which is why he has always enjoyed a substantial majority). Last time we had a Conservative MP was prior to 1997, when the incumbent had a majority of 11. Needless to say, he lost. But hey-ho, miraculously a job appeared in Brussels to compensate for the loss of income.
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From letters to the editor in the FT a few days ago.
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So, if this dot among several dots is in a CGS slab then how are the masses supposed to differentiate between dots A, B C etc given you have to be a member to look at their site which means you have to cough up a fee to get the information. As a result of the limited access, this variety (and others) will effectively remain 'unrecorded' to the majority through lack of information and a ballpark price will be similarly elusive. Varieties need to be published in a printed volume to gain any traction.
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Put anything into a reference volume and everybody wants one. There is a huge number of box tickers in the hobby.
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Even with a unique item there will be plenty of competition from those who collect the series. It isn't so much a case of the demand not being there, rather a case of the elevated price reducing the number of people willing to fork out. I think a lot of people will view the rarities as an expendable luxury when the funds required would pay for a lot more of the pieces they want. Other than a lack of funds, there is no reason to exclude the rarities, as all contribute to the overall story.
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Let's See Your Toned English Milled Silver!
Rob replied to Paulus's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
Struck in Edinburgh, but sort of makes it into English silver. -
Thoughts on this 1746 half crown
Rob replied to Conor44's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
I think it is pretty much uncirculated, but slightly weakly struck on the obverse. My reasoning being that the apparent flattening of the nose on the shoulder and to two hair curls is not backed up by the evidence seen on the legend. In the case of the latter, each character has slightly raised edges to the letter and I would expect that to show wear if the hair was as flat as it is. I spent quite a while to come to a conclusion I could rationalise. That's mine by the way, not the OP coin. Yours is certainly around the EF mark. Possibly just shy of full EF given the wear seen on the laurels and over the hair generally, but worth looking at in hand. There's a bit of obvious wear to the Garter star rays too -
Thoughts on this 1746 half crown
Rob replied to Conor44's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
Too small for me too. Mine attached if it helps for comparison. -
Or a caving acquaintance from the 1970s - Phil Dinn
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For the same reason I put my foot down and wouldn't agree to our second daughter's middle name beginning with C. She is not a car park (NCP)
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How much extra would you pay for provenance coins?
Rob replied to azda's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
Anyone writing a numismatic book will invariably use their own coins if suitable given the cost of procuring photographs from places like the BM. The days when it was performing a public service are long gone. 15 years ago they were charging £30 for a picture of a coin. By 2010 that had increased to £50 per side or £60 for both sides on one picture. God only knows how much it would be now. It's always nice to use an image that features in a publication, but again, a collector specialising in a particular area will frequently have a smattering of the best examples - which are also the pieces that attract the most attention at auction. i.e. I refer you to my previous post. Any definitive tome on a subject will usually ensure the plate coins are sought after. -
How much extra would you pay for provenance coins?
Rob replied to azda's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries
No provenance ever harmed a coin's value, but doesn't necessarily produce a premium because everyone tries to acquire things as cheaply as possible and in any case must be related to the popularity of the sale on the day. To my mind, the provenance/hoard/desirability issue is a small part of a greater circle. A collection of top quality coins is always likely to have more historical documentation for the simple reason that nothing happens in a vacuum. People often remember when the coin was last sold and the price paid. They are frequently aware of recent pieces that have come to market, the price they sold for and their grade together with any defects. All of this helps put a coin in context compared to its peers in respect of value and where it comes in the pecking order of available examples. So a good provenance is usually linked to a higher quality collection, and a higher quality coin is normally going to cost the buyer more in any case. It's actually very difficult to strip out any part of the price that is attributable to a specific provenance. When you say books or papers, presumably you are then able to tie the coin into a specific collection? Are you including catalogues in this? If so there was precious little illustration prior to the late 19th century and what there was tended to be a little stylistic from wood carvings. Sometimes there was an attempt to be accurate even with wood carvings, e.g. the Pembroke plates (1746) tried to faithfully reproduce the shape of fragments, and the illustrations in Ruding (1819-41) were sufficiently accurate to be able to identify some pieces, such as the Tournai 1513 groat as being that example formerly in the BM. I suppose you are mostly paying little, if anything for the name, but by happy coincidence and self evidently the best collections contain the best individual pieces, which typically sell for higher prices.