Poppy Posted Tuesday at 04:28 PM Posted Tuesday at 04:28 PM Hello 🙂 thank you for letting me join the forum. I've been reading through the various posts for the last few weeks. I have recently inherited a number of coins; some of which have been fairly well looked after, some of which are in old, damp albums and some of which are rattling around in boxes and tins. I hope you won't mind me posting a few on here every now and again as I start to sort through them all 😊. At first glance it looks like some of them might be worth a little bit and others are worth nothing more than the enjoyment of looking at them and learning about them. A lot of the ones in albums have gone green! Hopefully there's a photo attached of the better of the storage containers. The coins in these containers are in little velvety trays. Hopefully this all posts correctly! Thank you 🙂.  2 Quote
Chris Perkins Posted Tuesday at 05:10 PM Posted Tuesday at 05:10 PM Hello. Certainly a nice looking coin cabinet. I hope the content is equally high-end! The greenness is caused by PVC, which was a common constituent of plastic coin albums from the 60s to 80s (and sometimes beyond). You may be lucky and be able to remove the mess with acetone, which won't harm the coins. 2 Quote
Poppy Posted Tuesday at 05:29 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 05:29 PM Aaw thank you 🙂 that acetone tip sounds like a good plan! The old albums are definitely from the 80's because I used to help put the coins into them as my share of the hobby! Some of the coins from the cabinet look absolutely gorgeous - I'm going to do a bit of research to try to figure out what they are and then probably share some photos on here as they're so beautiful to look at 🤩 there's a nice variety of well loved coins (ie pretty worn out!) and barely touched coins. Thank you again! 2 Quote
Paddy Posted Tuesday at 06:34 PM Posted Tuesday at 06:34 PM I am looking forward to seeing these! Â 2 Quote
Poppy Posted Tuesday at 06:46 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 06:46 PM Thanks 🙂 I'm looking forward to working out what coins are here and how old they are. Quote
secret santa Posted Tuesday at 07:20 PM Posted Tuesday at 07:20 PM 46 minutes ago, Paddy said: I am looking forward to seeing these! Me too ! 1 Quote
Coinery Posted Tuesday at 08:27 PM Posted Tuesday at 08:27 PM Make sure it’s the surgical/household acetone, though, not the stuff you clean your nails with, as these mostly have moisturisers +\- other products added to them. 1 Quote
Poppy Posted Tuesday at 09:31 PM Author Posted Tuesday at 09:31 PM That's also a very good tip - thank you. This is such a lovely forum 😊 1 Quote
Paddy Posted yesterday at 08:36 AM Posted yesterday at 08:36 AM As a tip on getting surgical Acetone - chemists sell it but at very high price for very small quantities. You can order it online for a small fraction of the money. Â 1 Quote
Poppy Posted yesterday at 06:55 PM Author Posted yesterday at 06:55 PM Well who knew how difficult it was to photograph a coin 😅. I think we have a 1900 Crown in reasonable condition with a bit of a green tinge to it, and a 1897 Shilling and 1887 Florin in quite lovely condition. I just picked a random three from the same era as there are so many to choose from! There are hundreds of coins spanning a vast range of dates and grades (I can't fathom how to grade a coin properly) and I've no clue what may have been cleaned or what may be a forgery or genuine! Any hints, tips or ideas on how to organise and catalogue very much appreciated. If anyone would like to suggest grades or values that'd also be amazing but ultimately I'm just admiring and enjoying the coins and their history 😊. I'll post the hammered coins in the correct part of the forum for some help in identifying those ones. They're very tricky to work out! Thanks everyone 🙂 P.S. I'll try and order some acetone over the weekend to combat some of the green!   Quote
Poppy Posted yesterday at 06:56 PM Author Posted yesterday at 06:56 PM And the back of the coins 🙂 Quote
Chris Perkins Posted yesterday at 07:29 PM Posted yesterday at 07:29 PM Not bad. Coincidentally, those are IMO textbook examples of a normal circulated coin (around Fine) - the crown, a mid grade coin (around VF) - the florin, and a higher grade coin (around EF) - the shilling. 1 Quote
Poppy Posted yesterday at 07:36 PM Author Posted yesterday at 07:36 PM Thank you 😊 every now and again I'm going to pick out little groups of three like this and admire them / post them on here 🤩 it's a lovely space to share the coins! Quote
Paddy Posted yesterday at 07:51 PM Posted yesterday at 07:51 PM To add more - the 1900 Crown is quite common and not rare. On the edge you will see the words ANNO REGNI followed by Roman numerals - for 1900 these will be either LXIII or LXIV for the 63rd or 64th year of her reign. They are of equal scarcity but interesting. In that condition probably £40 to £50 in the current market. The Florin 1887 is the most common year for Jubilee head florins as it was the first year of this design and a great many were put aside. Condition is better but probably £20 to £25. The shilling 1897 is probably the nicest coin and the most collectable grade - the same value as the florin. All in my humble opinion - others may say different. 2 Quote
Poppy Posted yesterday at 07:56 PM Author Posted yesterday at 07:56 PM That's nice to know 😊 thank you. I actually really love the shilling, it's such a good colour! Quote
copper123 Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago yep love the shilling would be nice in my type set 1 Quote
Zo Arms Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago 23 hours ago, Poppy said: Well who knew how difficult it was to photograph a coin 😅. I think we have a 1900 Crown in reasonable condition with a bit of a green tinge to it, and a 1897 Shilling and 1887 Florin in quite lovely condition. I just picked a random three from the same era as there are so many to choose from! There are hundreds of coins spanning a vast range of dates and grades (I can't fathom how to grade a coin properly) and I've no clue what may have been cleaned or what may be a forgery or genuine! Any hints, tips or ideas on how to organise and catalogue very much appreciated. If anyone would like to suggest grades or values that'd also be amazing but ultimately I'm just admiring and enjoying the coins and their history 😊. I'll post the hammered coins in the correct part of the forum for some help in identifying those ones. They're very tricky to work out! Thanks everyone 🙂 P.S. I'll try and order some acetone over the weekend to combat some of the green!   You should be able to get acetone from any builders merchants. Jewson, Selco etc.... 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.