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Peckris

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Everything posted by Peckris

  1. That's a case. My own set is in a red cardboard box. It is like modern proof sets which come in a choice of packaging at different prices. Here is a picture of one from the internet:
  2. Peckris

    Coin Cabinet

    It's possible the original owner left a large gap at the top to hold packs of silica gel?
  3. Peckris

    Room 101

    Yes, if two genuine bidders try the same tactic, there's little you can do. Luckily in my case, a little digging showed there was hanky panky afoot, and the seller and I managed to sort it out between us.
  4. Peckris

    uk 5 new pence

    Maybe not, but defaced coins DO exist, and I've never heard of a prosecution in modern times for doing so. Those are very common coins by the way, so no real damage done from our point of view.
  5. Peckris

    Room 101

    Hah! I watched a computer with lots of enhanced features for several days, and was there poised over the keyboard. With little action at 10 minutes to go, I bid £10 over the current top bid, and was 'highest bidder' with about a minute to go. It then went over £400, so I waited for 7 seconds to go, then put in a 'stupid bid' of £701. I won the auction ... at £701. I looked closer and there were two bids after mine - one for £599, then a split second later at £699. I viewed the bidding history and saw that the underbidder had withdrawn their successful bid 16 times out of 18 auctions over the previous 30 days. I contacted the seller, querying the auction and got a reply next day saying he knew nothing about the underbidder and agreed that the winning bid was 'on the high side'. I looked again at the bidding history and saw that the underbidder was 'no longer registered with eBay'. Luckily the seller was honest (100%), and we agreed a BIN price at £10 more than the previous kosher bid. He reckoned that retailers sometimes went onto eBay and forced up auction prices (withdrawing if they won) to raise the market prices of what they had in stock in their shops, e.g. secondhand computers.
  6. Peckris

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    Every Picture Tells A Story
  7. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    Mick - my favourite version of Promised Land is by The Band on Moondog Matinée. How sad is that? To step up several notches in class, this is one of my favourite tracks of the 90s:
  8. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    I used to love that until they hijacked it for live football on telly.
  9. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    A varied selection there Mick! Now I know where The Pioneers pinched the riff for Long Shot Kick De Bucket from... Anyway, back to relative normality for me
  10. 8 and a half million attended the South Bank exhibition alone; then add in several million more at events held around the UK, and you have a huge potential market for the crown as a keepsake. Also consider it was the first non-gold coin to feature the popular Pistrucci 'George & the Dragon' design for 50 years, and I wouldn't be at all surprised if the number sold at Festival events far exceeded the number applied for by post from the RM.
  11. Considering the huge numbers attending the Festival of Britain compared with the coin collector base of the time*, wouldn't that be more likely the other way around? *(nearly 2m 1951 Crowns compared with 20,000 proof sets struck)
  12. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    Please sign that you are 18 or over...
  13. Some later settlements - e.g. at Wroxeter - were based on Roman towns. Others, like Carlisle, maintained a continuous occupation until the Norse raids. It is more true though to say that Roman stone was pilfered for all kinds of uses, especially up at Hadrians Wall which was several times taller than the present paltry remains. However, the resettlement of Roman towns (for example Chester, Colchester, Bath, Exeter, York, Cirencester) tended to be a later trend by which time their Roman artefacts were either buried, ruined, pilfered, or what have you. The Saxons did not use Roman money, in fact their use of any money was limited, until later kingdoms when the Saxon kings issued sceats (silver pennies) with a combination of their own image on one side for propaganda purposes, and Christian symbolism on the reverse, usually a cross. The Saxon and Roman cultures had very little in common, and Roman artefacts tended to be viewed with suspicion for a long time. The closest they came to Rome was the monastic system, and later on, visits to Charlemagne and various Popes, but that wasn't for a few hundred years after the Romans left Britain.
  14. Ah, you were referring to the box colour for the entire set? Ok, but AFAIK, the individual boxed crowns only come in green or burgundy. If you've got a picture of a blue one, I'd be more than happy to see it.
  15. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    Not strictly speaking a song as such, but definitely one of my favourite clips!
  16. Which they did, long before 1918/19 if you read the introduction to Michael Freeman's 'bible'. Officially they supplied the Mint with blanks from 1912, but given the reddish colour of their blanks, it's not too far-fetched to think they also supplied some between 1908-1910.
  17. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    Good song, not quite so sure about the performance? Get rid of the echo and go for the full Mark E Smith treatment!
  18. I've seen regular 1951 crowns exactly like the VIP Proof in the picture above.
  19. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    (I just posted this, but it has gone - where?) Anyway, a song from a friend of mine:
  20. Peckris

    Musical breaks

    Hidden talents there Dave - I've never written a song in my life, so nothing but admiration here. Be interesting to hear them professionally produced and sung?
  21. Windsor Coins? I bought several coins from John Dunkerton (equally neat labels) but am not sure if Dennis is his son or his father. Looking at the price of that 1904 penny, that would be post-1970s and therefore presumably the son. (I met both again at the Midland Fair, late 90s)
  22. Peckris

    Silver coins

    What I can see there Christie, amounts to silver value only. Be aware that pre-1947 is 50% silver, whereas pre-1920 it's full sterling silver. Get what you can for them, from anyone who buys coins like that for their silver content.
  23. Listen, you wouldn't believe how long it took me to "get" UT + subjunctive - get out of here with your gerunds!
  24. Peckris

    LCA December

    Fully struck up examples of coins normally found weakly struck always carry a premium. For example the 1895 YH farthing, and 1918/1919H pennies. That sixpence looks better than normal for that date and as Nick says, might fetch significantly more than estimate.
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