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  2. I'm not seeing the images in any of your posts. All I get is a large black square with an X top right to close it, and a small broken square in the centre.
  3. Interesting posts, though absolutely nothing to do with Brexit!
  4. Nice coin, and I wish I had brought one before it got so expensive. £200 was a good deal even then I think.
  5. I picked this up for about £200 over 20 years ago: I wouldn't rate it as a thousand pound coin but should be well over what I paid!
  6. Hi. It's this one, identified by @1887jubilee as one of many (minor) patterns of 1887 silver: It's the 6d on the left - note the far 7, and the first 8 with a higher 8 beneath it referred to as a "horned 8" on one example in an auction lot.
  7. Today
  8. I did message the seller to tell him what it was but he chose not to amend the description and luckily several people recognised it.
  9. I had the luck to pick this one up on ebay , unattributed 😊 An F148 high tide
  10. Another one of these sold on ebay a couple of days ago for over £260. Perhaps a little better than the one Pete pictured above last year, but not great. Again not attributed, but nevertheless attracted a lot of interest.
  11. I had a bottle of benzene as a child for showing watermarks on stamps.
  12. Last week
  13. One is ON the truncation (Rare), the other is UNDER the truncation (Common)
  14. 7 Million for 3rd (Veiled) portrait, 1300 for 2nd (Jubilee head) portrait.
  15. Hi Chris, I'm just back catching up and this topic has piqued my interest - can you elaborate on the "rare 1887 6d" please? PS - Hi everyone else!
  16. I remember my A level Chemistry teacher telling me that people used to wash their hands with benzene in university labs. Glad that it was banned by my days. But there are of course more "hazardous" substances that are still commonly used in labs because there are no safer alternatives. For example, if I have to choose between dipping my finger into benzene or into concentrated nitric acid, then my choice will of course be benzene.
  17. Hello, Selling this 1949 proof uniface sixpence. Exceedingly rare. One of only six struck. rated R6 in ESC. Message me privately if interested please. Thanks
  18. I probably paid too much for my 2025 definitive set, but the simple fact is that they are SO much nicer looking coins than anything the US has made since 1947 when they stopped making the Walking Liberty Half Dollar. Even that was a straight lift from Oscar Roty's La Semeuse but at least they had the good taste to steal from something good . Still, the Salmon, the bees & the four plants are such exquisite designs to my taste...
  19. The 2024 Salmon 50p is actually selling for £22 at the moment (ignoring the silly prices people are asking for) and around £50 for a full set. Will be interesting to see what happens in the next six months or so.
  20. Might be "silvered" i.e. coated in silver or similar-looking metal, a not uncommon practice in Victorian times. I've got a young head penny version. Can you see inside the hole at the metal colour?
  21. there was cupro nickel proofs in,1875, 1877, its such a shame the state of it and punched through, but what a find if it is, even in that state🤩
  22. Many thanks for the suggestion – I could list a dozen Brexity coin matters, but you immediately came up with one that I never thought of! Three points come to my own mind concerning the BM “Money Gallery”. 1) There is a useful account about how it came into existence here – straight from the horse’s mouth https://icomon.mini.icom.museum/wp-content/uploads/sites/20/2019/11/The_HSBC_Money_Gallery_at_the_British_Museum__Access_to_excellence.pdf “In 1995 HSBC Holdings PLC, the international financial group, with a deliberate focus on the increasingly globalised nature of monetary transactions, agreed to provide a donation worth £2,000,000 for the project” I am not sure when you visited – but the “deliberate focus on the increasingly globalised nature of monetary transactions” definitely lay behind that 1997 plan - to make sure every country got representation - and this seems surely linked to the advertising strategies of HSBC some years back (Just search Youtube for “HSBC” and “culture”). So my feeling is not that Soho matters were deliberately dropped. More like - it just did not fit the HSBC core narrative and was forgotten. I will add, knowing the sort of money that international brands pump into football, at 2 million, the BM rather sold itself short. Or maybe, scholarly interest is just a niche matter these days? 2) From my own side, it was the reorganisation of the gallery under Citi funding around 2012 that troubled. You point out the change of name, from “Coins and Medals” to “Money”. Under Citi only one long wall was left devoted to “Coins”. The other entire wall was now devoted to “Money”. Predictably the “Money” wall culminated in……... credit cards. Citibank made many billions from Credit cards, and was part of the associated anti-cash/coin advertising push back in the day. It seems curiously difficult to find the Citi BM donation on line – but I seem to recall it was 4 million. Personally that seems to me a cheap price for what rather looks like a shot at re-writing history. 3) More fundamentally, my fear is that these international money men are coming to the institution with the mind set of an advertising agent. Grabbing the attention of the general public is the core aim, scholarly accuracy sometimes lagging a long long way behind. Very specifically I can point to a Youtube video of the current curator, appointed post Citi, holding a silver pound coin of Charles I and saying the words: “it is a pound weight in silver” Oh dear. Rob Tye
  23. Thanks, but I used to visit Birmingham now and again so was hoping to combine a trip. That no longer applies. If I phone them up again I'll see if they know this Dave Symonds.
  24. Again, some very lovely coins we have here.
  25. I suppose if any shopkeeper was offered up a gothic crown they would be a bit daft to not take it for face value seeing as coins were bought and sold as antiques in victorian times . Wreath crowns come into the same bracket
  26. Beautiful! But I am happy with the one I have, if anything, I'd like to get a scruffier one to carry as a pocket coin 😇 I just noted it with interest while looking for something else considering the conversation in this thread.
  27. Consider getting a specimen crown rather than the RE proof as it is much cheaper. The specimen is nice, has reflective fields (but no frosting), and comes in the same red box as the proof. My specimen (top) cost me £50 in 2020 and my RE proof (bottom) cost £500 15 years ago.
  28. Speaking of Crowns... https://www.sovr.co.uk/products/george-v-1935-silver-jubilee-crown-raised-edge-letters-ngc-pf63-cameo-km39433?_pos=3&_psq=1935&_ss=e&_v=1.0 One of the 2500 proof with raised lettering on the edge inscription rather than embossed lettering. I love that design anyway and if I could, I'd get it in a heartbeat. But my regular one, in AU condition that I got for $31.50 will just have to do 🤣
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