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

Nicholas

Newmismatist
  • Posts

    470
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    9

Everything posted by Nicholas

  1. The 1905 Halfcrown copy in forgery.com looks good in the picture. I can normally pick a forgery a mile away.
  2. I guess the art here is to know when a coin is well or poorly struck. Coin wear is uniform across coin and easier to recognise. Milled: under magnification poorly struck coins lack detail on high or low points of a coin Hammered: strike is rarely even, so judge the strike on the sharpest area of the coin.
  3. It's not an exact science just one of a number of things to look for. For oz coins pre 1936 we use the 8 pearls on kings crown in a similar way.
  4. I look at the orb beneath the cross pattee on the reverse. The wear on the horizontal line across the orb often indicates wear of the coin. No wear is EF plus. Try it. http://s1322.photobucket.com/user/2tearsinabucket1/media/image_zpsced871f8.jpg.html
  5. and You might have to have a word to NGC who graded the coin Proof 62. I'd like to hear their reply.
  6. Ok, heres my sequestered halfcrown.... http://s1322.photobucket.com/user/2tearsinabucket1/media/image_zps53ce9fac.jpg.html?sort=3&o=0 http://s1322.photobucket.com/user/2tearsinabucket1/media/image_zps4f76d3bf.jpg.html?sort=3&o=1
  7. When you live a long way away from everyone else you rely heavily on making purchases on images alone and not seeing the real thing. I guess this builds a healthy scepticism as photos can be played with and you never get to see along the rims or see how flat a coin is on a table or its true daylight tone.
  8. I'd keep looking. These halfcrowns are one of the best looking coins around, plenty of history and even with the recent spink price jump, still great value.
  9. My humble opinion no better than Fine, especially for a 1658 issue. Strange grey coloration around rim looks a tad cleaned once. Not really a 'decent one'
  10. Yes. I saw this one at Goldberg too. This is a really nice proof, but probably still won't beat 42k GBP! BTW hard to see the difference between this so called proof and circulating strike...
  11. This coin is close to mint state, With the lines and colouring, you would have to see the coin in person to really know what was going on ie part of the coin production or as wear and tear... In any case you're not likely to get your money back at that price - not in this life time anyway...
  12. If you were to categorise my collection it would not be on denomination but more on period: tudor-stuart-commonwealth.
  13. started with halfcrowns because they were a nice size to look at and store in 4*4 snap holders. Drifting now towards crowns as they hold value better. But also have guineas, halfpennies, shillings., angels and groats ...have owned couple of Anglo Saxon pennies
  14. Only commemorative I bought recently was the latest Australian 50 cent piece with my wife's image- 50th Anniversary of the Australian Ballet... unfortunately Ill never match that. ; (
  15. I only get coins slabbed when selling in the US, else I crack them out for my collection.. (Sorry NGC I know this wrecks your stats)
  16. BTW most countries have import taxes, Australia is roughly 10%. Ouch. So, you'll find that most coin dealers and auction houses declare a trivial low value and describe the package contents as "metal object over 100 years old for numismatic study" or something similar...
  17. Heritage auctions has a huge following and your best chance of market/list price. All coins should be slabbed by NGC prior to the auction and heritage will arrange this at about $30 each (I think) - give plenty of time ahead of the auction. The US market is very strong for milled proofs especially if the NGC grade is MS64,65,66... Non slabbed coins receive little attention in the sceptical us market. If you tell me what coins you have and condition I can suggest which auction house around the world.
  18. Very funny gentlemen and thank you.
  19. Oh no- a walk to the park with the boys and now Im in trouble with spammers... My mistake.
  20. Understood. It perhaps lost focus in the photo bucket process. Can you increase the number of pixels in the photo bucket step?
  21. Thanks Rob. Love this forum. Brilliant. Any chance of a copy of this page that's in focus? I'm going a bit cross-eyed. N
  22. It seems the complete Edward VI dies are listed in the 1950 Lingford collection sale, page 8. Anyone got a copy?
×
×
  • Create New...
Test