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Sylvester

Coin Hoarder
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Posts posted by Sylvester

  1. An 1887 year set from Crown to silver threepence is as good a place to start as any. That's where i started. That way you don't have to pick a denomination from the off, you can find out which one you're natually drawn to.

    1937 set can be fun too; crown to farthing. If you really want to start cheap try the 1967 set (halfcrown to halfpenny), a very good set to start with.

  2. Coin fairs in the North of England. There's one on in York at the end of January it's held at the Race course. It's on on Friday 20th and Saturday 21st Jan 2006.

    For experience i'd recommend going on a friday, as by saturday alot of stuff has gone. There'll still be plenty of coins there on the saturday that will catch your attention but to get the full appreciation.

  3. The rule i use (and rarely break), "at the time of issue would you have recieved one in circulation?"

    YES - Then it's in.

    NO - Then forget it.

    I bend the rules a little; e.g sovereigns were not in circulation much after the outbreak of WWI, but few would argue aginst them being a proper issue.

    Stuff like 1980s BU coins, most came only in sets and never went into circulation, but should a 1982 2p coin happen to go into circulation then there'd not be much trouble involved in the coin passing through the tills.

    Proofs i generally avoid but i accept that if they are of circulating coinage then it's perfectly alright.

  4. And they wonder why people are put off collecting new stuff? Like the stamp hobby it boils down to three things;

    1. There's so much stuff you can't keep up

    2. They charge high prices for them in the first place

    3. They are a poor 'investment' (dare i use the word), because they never do well on the secondhand market... due generally because there's that much different stuff out there the competition is spread out. Also alot of modern collectors give up because they can't keep up anyhow.

    If you were saying trying to collect all cupronickel coins minted in the 1950s then you'd have all the circulation stuff and two commem crowns to get. Anyone else trying the same goal is after the same stuff. Make it all cupronickel stuff from the 2000-9 decade and well, where do you start? Proofs, UNC, specimens, Piedfort proofs, proofs in silver, commems, commems in differet packaging, commems in silver... You'd be there for years.

    Pointless.

  5. Yorkshire is clean out of 1988 £1 coins. You never see them round these parts... except for two a year on average. And one of those is usually one i'm spending from what's left of my hoard.

    At one point i had seven of them and that had taken me about 4 years to save up. Currently i have one and it's the only one i've seen since 2003.

    I'm still looking though.

    I'm getting a 2004 pound coin nearly every week now.

  6. I have just recieved my 1st slabbed coin today, a nice 1902 low tide penny M63 for $50 hope I didn't pay too much :o I've also just ordered for Christmas a nice wood coin cabinet to display my collection in date and type order. My question. As my recent acquision is slabbed would I devalue it by prizing the little darling apart so that it can take its rightfull position in the new cabinet.

    Crack that coin out! Give it the freedom it deserves.

    Do you know how to crack the coin out? G-Clamp the corners.

  7. I don't care for mistrikes, but i do for 1988 £1 coins.

    Mintage of 1988 £1 coins is alot lower than any other date (except 1998/9 which were not minted for circulation but only in sets).

    The 1988 is the third 'rarest' £1 coin and the rarest in active circulation. It also in my eyes has the nicest design most designs are used twice, the 1988's was used just the once, why i don't know but it gives the 1988 a unique quality.

    Alot of the circulation issues are hoarded because they look 'different' and because collectors like me like having them around.

    I did once spend five of them together in one go. Now that's something that never happens. You never see more than one in change at any one time. I haven't seen any of them this year.

    I haven't recieved one in change since 2003.

  8. Yep! The very same. 105E Delux i think!

    I dunno how bad, 'poor' condition they meant, but if they really did bash it around with that tree then it'd be about fit for scrap and not much else.

    It was under a sheet apparently and had been there a while in the car park, so i suspect rust would have set in under the wheel arches and along the bottom edges of the door. Angleboxes, more like rustboxes. Like all 60s cars.

  9. Harry Potter might be able to defeat Lord Voldemort amongst others.

    But seemingly his powers are no good at saving flying cars. As someone's pinched the car used in the film!

    Apparently it wasn't even in drivable condition and thus must have been towed away or a recovery vehicle used, i can't see why anyone would want to pinch it? Firstly it's condition is reportedly very poor and secondly i wouldn't think selling it would be all that easy.

    I mean since the film came out everyone now refers to them as Harry Potter cars! :D

  10. It wasn't a dig at your coins (excuse the expression)....I'll get me soft brass brush & olive oil out. B)

    & gingers and was a stab in the dark (Or ought to be :D )

    I never thought you were!

    Mind you should you feel like it though, i wouldn't be that bothered. Nothing much bothers me.

    Honestly though cleaned coins don't bother me all that much.

    Less of the ginger remarks though! :D (i know i started it...) I'm not gingerist though, far from it... too far from it if truth be known.

  11. Always good to hear. They must get them either from Barrington Smith in Leeds, or Vera Trinder in London. They both sell to collecting related shops.

    I haven't asked! I doubt they tell me anyhow... :D

    Of course what they don't know is i actually know the publisher! :) (Actually i think Mr Smith knows because we were talking about the catalogue, and i was explaining how much better it was!)

    ... you can pay me later ;)

    :lol:

  12. To be honest Peter i'm not bothered if they have been cleaned. Cleaned coins of this era aren't really a problem, it's a fact of life. Like freckles and gingers, the two go hand in hand. ;)

    Sorry couldn't resist.

  13. On saturday i went one better. Domitian (AD 91-96) silver denarius minted in about 91/2. Depicting Minverva on the reverse. Domitian was also incidentally the last of Suetonious' Twelve Caesars and he was part of the Flavian dynasty that managed to successfully install themselves as Emperors after the catastrophic events of the AD 69 succession disputes following the downfall of Nero in 68.

    903683.jpg

    And today i went and bought this; Severus Alexander (222-235) denarius minted around 232 depicting Annona on the reverse. Severus Alexander was involved in the downfall of the raving nutcase Emperor Elagabalus in 222.

    903830.jpg

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