Test Jump to content
The British Coin Forum - Predecimal.com

Emperor Oli

Accomplished Collector
  • Posts

    2,357
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Emperor Oli

  1. I think I've found about six in that time. They live in a box along with some of the commemorative £2s and 50ps and overseas £1 coins.
  2. I trust they'll be on sale in London, so I shall get my copy then!
  3. Have fun with the noun declensions, there's a combination of about seventy suffixes to learn. Plus besides the normal nominative, accusative, genitive and dative cases, you've got the ablative, locative and vocative ones! Good luck
  4. It's "Wherefore Art Thou, Romeo?" where "Wherefore" means "Why". So Juliet is asking why Romeo had to be a Montague, the sworn enemy of her father, Capulet.
  5. I wondered about saying that but thought better of it
  6. I wouldn't class a worn die as an error, nor something like a die crack. Errors to me are wrong letters or numbers, or the wrong flan or combination of dies. What does everyone else think?
  7. Where did you read Numismatics?!
  8. I'm afraid it's true, chav culture seems to pervade most towns.
  9. I have a Canadian Maple Leaf, which is essentially a bullion coin like the one listed, but in silver. It is in its original mint blister pack which has many marks on it, the likes of which are on that one. I would therefore say it is only the packaging that is marked, but caveat emptor as always.
  10. No idea about the legality about it, but nobody tends to bat an eyelid if you get one in change.
  11. "New Age Gypsy"? You're nothing more than glorified tramps.
  12. You could always set up a Photobucket Account. This provides free photo hosting, so you can post any pictures (within reason) on message boards like this.
  13. I didn't really think, of course it is.
  14. Basically, Spink reckons that middling grade coins have risen modestly in price, but the higher end stuff has surged ahead. Whilst reading it just now, it talks of the Chesire Collection auctioned in America: "All had been slabbed and re-graded according to the American numerical system with the intention of presenting them to a different type of buyer." I found that rather humourous, and it goes on to bemoan the flaws in the Sheldon System, and why our good old British system is superior.
  15. It arrived today. Opening the package was a chore, with parcel tape in too many places. Once I'd opened the outer packaging, it was again wrapped in another piece of cardboard: they certainly pack things well! I could see the spine in the packaging and it looked black - visions of a black cover with gold writing and a George IV £5 flashed through my mind. However, once I took it out, I found that it is actually striped with purple and black. The coin on this year's is a William IV £5 piece. I was decidedly underwhelmed with the cover, but the inside is the usual comprehensive pricing, maps, and pictures. This year the market trends section is approximately five pages.
  16. I preordered mine, so I expect it tomorrow or Tuesday.
  17. Splendid. I got the US 2006 Redbook and the colour images in there certainly make it a more enjoyable read.
  18. Jolly good, is it the same cover designer as the milestone CC2005? How big do you reckon the print run will be? I'll get one at the London Coin Fair
  19. Colin Cooke's staff have the first and only bid.
  20. Banks should still accept them, but as you say, being worth only 25p each it would seem quite pointless unless you have hundreds. You could give them to children to get them interested in numismatics.
  21. For hard to find or out of print books, I've used Bookfinder many times and it's never failed me. Someone pointed it out here a few months ago I think.
  22. The search function is a gem.
  23. Congratulations to her! So I suppose she's doing sciences and maths at A-level?
  24. Today was GCSE results day across the country. I got 7 A* and 3 A, which I was happy with. Next year I'm doing Politics, Economics, German and Maths at Sixth Form.
×
×
  • Create New...
Test