Jump to content
British Coin Forum - Predecimal.com

50 Years of RotographicCoinpublications.com A Rotographic Imprint. Price guide reference book publishers since 1959. Lots of books on coins, banknotes and medals. Please visit and like Coin Publications on Facebook for offers and updates.

Coin Publications on Facebook

   Rotographic    

The current range of books. Click the image above to see them on Amazon (printed and Kindle format). More info on coinpublications.com

predecimal.comPredecimal.com. One of the most popular websites on British pre-decimal coins, with hundreds of coins for sale, advice for beginners and interesting information.

Nick

Accomplished Collector
  • Content Count

    2,053
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    28

Everything posted by Nick

  1. Nick

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    You are comparing shillings and sixpences. The dots are more random on the sixpences and in lines on the shillings. I agree with Rob, that shilling looks like it was struck yesterday.
  2. Nick

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    I wonder if his Grandad was the forger...
  3. Two 1953 proof halfcrowns. Obv 1 on the left. There are quite a few small differences. The L of ELIZABETH is also quite a good differentiator.
  4. I guess it depends on when they were produced. If it was at the beginning of the 1953 production, you would expect obverse 1, but if they later decided there were some additional VIPs that needed sets then they could be obverse 2.
  5. Looks like obverse 2 to me. Both obverses exist in both proof and currency. I use the cross (+) to differentiate the two, although there are plenty of slight differences. Obverse 1 is just left of bead, obverse 2 is directly to bead.
  6. Nick

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    It was way too good for me.
  7. Nick

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    It's a shilling not a sixpence.
  8. Nick

    1937 Florin / Two Shillings

    It must be time for an updated Davies book...
  9. Nick

    1937 Florin / Two Shillings

    I have all four examples. There are quite a number of unconfirmed varieties in Davies that are now known to exist.
  10. Nick

    1937 Florin / Two Shillings

    You have a reverse B proof. Both reverses exist in both proof and currency.
  11. Nick

    1937 Florin / Two Shillings

    Here's my Rev B 1937 florin. I don't remember it being difficult to find, but maybe I was just lucky.
  12. Nick

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    The obverse looks a bit weaker than the norm, and there seem to be a few small scratches on both sides (although they could be on the slab). Nice lustre though. However, there are going to be nicer ones around with a number less than 66. It certainly is not £290 worth of coin.
  13. Nick

    LCA December

    Here's the link for the 1917 sixpence: http://www.londoncoins.co.uk/?searchlot=2972&searchtype=2&page=Catalogue I can't see any wear, so I wouldn't have a problem calling it UNC. Whether or not it is actually lustrous remains to be seen, but I wouldn't be surprised to see it fetch £120 or maybe a bit more.
  14. Nick

    Ebay's Worst Offerings

    It's a well known, good quality fake. Plenty of info in the fakes section of the forum.
  15. Proofs are made using polished dies and polished blanks. Currency are from standard dies and standard blanks. Specimen and proof-like come from one of each of the other combinations (not sure which way round).
  16. Pictures of coin VS referenced above.
  17. Nick

    LCA December

    Feel sure that a VIP set would not have been presented in a standard cardboard case.
  18. Nick

    Victoria shilling

    It's my own personal spreadsheet, so not published.
  19. Nick

    Victoria shilling

    Yes, there was. I have a spreadsheet in which I noted down all the die numbers that I'd seen and 84 does appear for 1865 shillings.
  20. Nick

    NGC Details Grading...now what?

    Or if you want the max. resolution images...
  21. Nick

    Die Numbers

    You just cannot tell how many coins each reverse die produced (other than by estimates based upon previous sales). During that mid-Victorian period they struggled to get quality steel and therefore some dies would have broken having struck just a few coins and others perhaps as many as 100,000.
  22. Nick

    1937 Florin / Two Shillings

    The easiest way I found to distinguish between them is to look at the 2nd I in SHILLING. Rev A is directly to a tooth, Rev B is directly to a gap. Both reverses exist in proof and currency.
  23. Nick

    1937 Penny

    I have a 1937 proof set with a 2+B penny. I bought the set because it had the 1+B variety of florin, but am now doubly pleased.
  24. By sound. Put them on a piece of glass and raise one side a couple of mm and let it go. They will make different sounds. Then compare with a pre-1920 threepence to see which is which.
  25. Nick

    Photobucket

    Or perhaps you could use Google Drive to host the images, which is free up to 5GB of storage. Not sure whether they allow embedding in other sites though.
×