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Everything posted by TomGoodheart
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	  coin for ID pleaseTomGoodheart replied to davetoo's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries Glad you got your answer dave. Oh, and I've deleted your duplicate thread in case you wondered!
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	  Sell Gold Online!TomGoodheart replied to TomGoodheart's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area! LOL I did read an article about bins of Georgian silver. I think there's a bit of concern in the antiques trade about quality items being lost. As for my gold cross, I was offered £120 and £128 by two jewellers. Since I can get £160 from the people Chingford mentioned and apparently £169 from a Birmingham firm that deal online, that's disappointing. I'd really have preferred it to go to someone who'd wear the thing, but 30% more is more towards the coin I want ... So I'm still considering my options.
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	  Sell Gold Online!TomGoodheart replied to TomGoodheart's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area! Prices seem ridiculous to me. But hey .. if they are happy to offer. I don't really go for jewellery so don't have much, just a cross pendant Dad had and a ring I had made years ago. If I can raise money for a coin I want far more .. why not? Of course, I have reservations about the fact that they are also pieces of jewellery and if melted, that's lost. I suspect a lot of antiques and coins will go this way. I'll try a jeweller first and see if I can sell for them to sell on rather than melt. But I sure am tempted ..
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	  Sell Gold Online!TomGoodheart replied to TomGoodheart's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area! One I have sold silver to, and pays cash is http://www.gold-traders.co.uk very reliable and fair, Michael Gouby found a shop in Hatton Garden that paid a little better, nearer the current market prices, he is away until the 19th so I can't get details. The best tend to give you a guaranteed price before you send the items, any that do not offer a valuation should have dot CON in their URL. Thanks for that. I like the idea of a guarantee. I found Hatton Garden Metals that seem to have a decent reputation. Their price is close to that link you provided. Of course, I'd still need to find a little bit more the other 50% and keep my fingers crossed the coin's still there!! hey, ho.
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	So I was after raising a few pennies to buy a coin I can't afford and thought of selling a bit of the shiny stuff. Anyone any experience of recently selling gold (jewellery in this case) either in a shop / jewellers or online? Recommendations? Warnings? Offers?
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	I suggest waiting to see what people here say. Buying individual coins on ebay and having them posted to Portugal will be expensive. I myself have a fair number of pennies and I don't even collect them! None of the decimal years are rare as far as I know and any dates members here can't find, Chris (the forum and Predecimal owner) might be able to find for you.
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	Splendid! The only other coin I've seen with this error has had what people on ebay call good honest wear. In other words, it's a complete mess! (see here:) Yours looks much better and the overstriking error makes it even more interesting. Your earlier photo isn't very high definition but I'd hazard a guess that it is a die duplicate of this detector find as the obverse looks a close match too . Have you any plans to add to your Charles I shilling collection?
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	OK. Think back a couple of centuries or so. Coin collecting was a fairly specialised field. A gentleman's pursuit for the most part. Occasionally people would publish details of their collections and people would compare what they had with what others had collected. For convenience people grouped similar style coins together. Numerous people did this, the most famous being J J North who classified most of the English hammered series. He classed these coins as 2223 and that basically meant any coin with the oval garnished shield with the C and R at the sides. As a group, we call this a type. Within a type there may be several varieties. Over time other people have called the same (or similar) groupings of coins by different names or numbers. Grant Francis called these type 3, because he felt they were the third really distinguishably different bust/reverse style. Spink group them all together as 2789 "Group D, fourth bust, type 3.1, with falling lace collar" etc... Michael Sharp however, who has a special interest in the shillings of Charles I, subdivided group D into six different varieties in his 1978 paper. Roy Osborne saw even more distinct styles. People use different classifications depending on their interests. Here in the UK Spink numbers are common ways of identifying at least the type of a coin. In the US many people use Krause who publish a series of books about coins from all around the world. Shilling collectors like me tend to use Michael Sharp's numbering because it's more specific than Spink, but not so complex it becomes unwieldy! Returning to your coin, S2789 only has one reverse throughout the series (though the style of things like mint mark or the shape of the harp varies). There are six obverses, three with jewelled crowns, three with plain: All of these coins are Spink 2789! In Sharp's nomenclature however they are (left to right) D1/1 - D6/1 (D is the type, the first number the variety and the second number (the one after the / ) tells you which reverse style the coin has. Yours is an example of the second; where the back arch of the crown starts to break the inner circle. As you can hopefully see, on the first bust, only the jewels of the front arch break the inner circle whereas in the third bust both arches of the crown extend well beyond the circle. Hope that makes sense and sorry if that's TMI! Once you get enthusiasts talking it can be hard to shut us up!
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	Is the alignment so variable? Yes. The thing is we are talking about hammered coins. Now, nowadays coins are mass produced by machine using technology that means that dies can be reproduced almost identically. That simply wasn't the case with hammered coins. Each had to be produced by hand and the only way to make more was to have more dies. However die making was also very labour intensive. Consequently the tricky bits were done by master engravers while the legend lettering punched onto the master die by someone less experienced. Analysis of coins in a series show that not only was the King's bust engraved separately from the mark of value, privy mark (the so-called 'mint mark') and legend, but often that the hair (including crown), face and collar/shoulders were engraved on separate 'master puncheons' which would then be combined to strike the eventual die that would be used to create the coin! In practice this led not only to different alignments between the legend and the bust, but also variations in the legend itself including missed letters or doubling of letters. Overmarks, where the updated mint mark is struck over the old one to avoid having to make new dies for the next year's issue are not uncommon. In fact this method of production left scope for even greater variation or error. I have seen photos of a coin with the mark of value punched upside down and another with the Scottish lion inverted. There is at least one example of a coin with the C and R missing from the sides of the shield. Even one where the coiner accidentally used a half crown reverse die with a shilling obverse! In fact there are people who particularly collect such curiosities! In fact, if you compare two hammered coins and find them to have the same features such as alignment and shape of letters, legend and alignmnet and in particular any flaws in lettering or design it is very likely that they came from the same dies. This exception to the normal variation in appearance has helped collectors to estimate how many dies existed (and thence to suggest how many coins may have survived and are likely to be found) in several instances! As an example, here are four coins. All are examples of (current editions) S 2789 (prior to 2006, 2785), Sharp D4/1. You will see there is a fair bit of variation between them!
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	I've been away on holiday, but it looks like you have your answer. The Spink number change caused quite a bit of confusion although the newer listings do identify several varieties that the older editions didn't. Your coin is also a Sharp D2/1 under the numbering system devised by Michael Sharp and which quite a few collectors of Charles I shillings now use. The harp mint mark is the usual one for the early coins of this series. I'm still looking for this coin with a portcullis mark which only appears on the later D series coins (with plain, unjewelled crowns)! Oh, and welcome!
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	... "date hard to distinguish" ... um. Yeah. coin Hang on .. I think I can just make it out ...... it's .. it's .. a coin?
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	  Electrolysis Coin / Artefact Cleaning KitTomGoodheart replied to sandman9's topic in Items For Sale I'm afraid I have deleted the three other threads advertising your electrolysis kit Paul. I felt that one was sufficient since the link you provide will take interested parties to your ebay listing and I didn't want people to get the impression you were just spamming. If you have additional products of a similar nature, perhaps just add them in a reply in this thread in future? Richard
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	There's a thread currently on CoinForgeryDiscussionList about a 1939 Canadian dollar made in the Lebanon which was slabbed by PCGS as genuine. Quality is improving because there's money to be made. I myself was fooled by the coin Rob recently wrote about; I saw a replica on ebay and assumed it was his coin that he'd sold. Fortunately it was light so if I have bought it I'd likely have been suspicious. But many newcomers don't weigh their coins and if they buy from an apparently reputable dealer (and the ebay coin was good enough to fool the seller) they have no reason to think they have anything but a genuine coin. Then they sell it on and it starts to gain a touch of provenance, even though it's just amongst inexperienced collectors... The trouble is, most coins don't have the sort of provenance that would reassure without a decent price tag to accompany them! You'd need very deep pockets (and miss out on some more recent discoveries and better condition examples) if you only ever bought coins that had been owned by reknown collectors. Currently I feel fairly confident I would be able to spot most fake Charles I shillings. But I'm not ruling out the liklihood that sooner or later I'll get fooled.
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	  Giving up collectingTomGoodheart replied to azda's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries Um .. . Ebay is but one source of coins. And there are many honest, reputable dealers and collectors out there. If you're bored with the hobby, that's one thing. But if you're still enjoying collecting then why let someone else put you off? Stuff them I say. Find other sources for your new aquisitions. And if that hasn't persuaded you .. well, I'd just suggest not doing anything hasty. You can sell your coins just as easily in a month as tomorrow. Think it over. And if that hasn't worked, well it's been fun and interesting seeing your new purchases, so thanks for that. And all the best. But I hope you reconsider.
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	  ID-ing Arabic coins, reward offered.TomGoodheart replied to Chris Perkins's topic in Enquiries about Non British coins I think No 1 may be a half rupee in the name of the Mughal Emperor Shah Alam II (1759-1806), Farrukhabad mint, Bengal Presidency, British India regnal year 45 (1803) KM# 97.1 See #640 on Rupee 1 However the number of dots appears unusual and the flatness and plain edge makes me wonder if it might be a replica? Compare it with this one: http://www.apnaorg.com/articles/subhash-1/ The second appears to be an earlier coin of the same bloke but from the Arkat mint, Bombay Presidency, British India dated 1759 and struck at Calcutta (Rose mint mark) KM# 427 Rupee 2 Clearly I'm using someone else's attribution so can't guarantee that's correct. As for the money, it was fun and didn't take long. I have a decent memory and guessed lucky. If I'm right, that's payment enough!
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	  How is everyone?TomGoodheart replied to Chris Perkins's topic in Nothing whatsoever to do with coins area! Not too bad here thanks Chris. Apart from the realisation I'm getting old! My daughter's fault. There she was playing with her Barbies, I look away for a second and suddenly she's off looking at which university to go to! wth??? She's even applied for a job for goodness sake! Ah well. I guess the consolation is that my small collection of coins is older too. Now, if only they were worth more for it ....
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	  1954 penny AVFTomGoodheart replied to Hello17's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries Any chance of a pic or two Hello? That always helps with valuations as clarity of the error will be a factor.
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	  hi everyone, im new here.TomGoodheart replied to james29's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries Hi James and welcome! Good to meet another penny enthusiast (and not another hammered shilling collector!!!)
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	  Old Editions of Spink & SeabyTomGoodheart replied to Coindome's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries Seaby 10th ed 1960 EF (only grade listed) £33/10/- (that's £33.50 fer you young 'uns) 1967 F £60 VF £85 EF £110 1972 VF £90 EF £125 (No price given for F)
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	  Flat disc collectors alert!TomGoodheart replied to argentumandcoins's topic in British Coin Related Discussions & Enquiries As a gap filler and providing it wasn't expensive ... and if it was the sort of thing I collect. I guess I'd compare it to this: Cost me £26 and almost a washer. But I only know of one other example. Which made it worth a space in the collection even though I can't ever see myself getting my money back! Which would make me a very poor dealer!
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	Welcome Steve. Early 20th century silver seems like a good starting point. I'd suggest a decent all-round book (Chris, the owner of the forum does 'Collectors' Coins' which would be a good and inexpensive starting point). Then when (if) you decide to narrow your collecting range you can get something a bit more specialised. But as to the sovereigns, with gold at an all-time high, I'm not sure they are such a good investment. Always preferable to buy when things aren't popular and sell when others are buying!
 
         
                     
                     
                     
                     
                     
                    