Leo Posted June 18, 2017 Posted June 18, 2017 A curious way of giving change when you only have a big coin... Quote
Rob Posted June 18, 2017 Posted June 18, 2017 Time honoured tradition that goes back a thousand years before this one Quote
mrbadexample Posted June 21, 2017 Posted June 21, 2017 Swedish 1 daler plate, 1746. 715g of madness. 1 1 Quote
PWA 1967 Posted June 21, 2017 Posted June 21, 2017 I know you mentioned it last week Jon ......unusual but what is it ?. Quote
mrbadexample Posted June 21, 2017 Posted June 21, 2017 1 hour ago, PWA 1967 said: I know you mentioned it last week Jon ......unusual but what is it ?. Here's what it says in Krause's Standard Catalog of World Coins Pete: "The Kingdom of Sweden issued copper plate money, heavy and cumbersome square or rectangular coins ranging in size up to about 13 by 25 inches down to less than 3 by 3 inches, from 1644 to 1776. The kingdom was poor in silver and gold but had rich copper resources. The coins were designed to contain copper bullion in the value of the silver coins they replaced, and were denominated as one, two, four, etc. dalers in silver mint or silver coin. Although sometimes classed with odd and curious money these were legal tender coins of the realm and although used and exported as bullion, they circulated domestically and were essential in the commerce of Sweden and Finland for more than a century." Mine was made from cannon bronze but they are also found in copper. The biggest was a 10 daler at almost 20kg. This one's my copper ½ daler from 1743. Unsurprisingly, Sweden were the first country in Europe to introduce banknotes. 2 Quote
Rob Posted June 21, 2017 Posted June 21, 2017 It's difficult to imagine a cabinet tray equipped to take them. However, there must be a sweet point where the size of the plate fits the cabinet exactly, and thus you have a tray with 5 holes to take coins as per your picture. Quote
mrbadexample Posted June 21, 2017 Posted June 21, 2017 40 minutes ago, Rob said: It's difficult to imagine a cabinet tray equipped to take them. However, there must be a sweet point where the size of the plate fits the cabinet exactly, and thus you have a tray with 5 holes to take coins as per your picture. They'd take a cartwheel penny quite nicely. Quote
mrbadexample Posted June 21, 2017 Posted June 21, 2017 25 minutes ago, Rob said: Go for it. I've only got one. Quote
Rob Posted June 22, 2017 Posted June 22, 2017 29 minutes ago, mrbadexample said: I've only got one. It would make a decent set if you put together a P1132 with 10 leaves, P1133 with 11 leaves and incuse dots, P1133A as previous but with raised dots, and an example of each of the unadopted obverse and reverse designs. Quote
mrbadexample Posted June 22, 2017 Posted June 22, 2017 Just now, Rob said: It would make a decent set if you put together a P1132 with 10 leaves, P1133 with 11 leaves and incuse dots, P1133A as previous but with raised dots, and an example of each of the unadopted obverse and reverse designs. I would like to but I've spent all my cash on a tray for them, apparently. Quote
Rob Posted June 22, 2017 Posted June 22, 2017 2 minutes ago, mrbadexample said: I would like to but I've spent all my cash on a tray for them, apparently. Know the feeling. I went to view the DNW lots before the sale. Missed the 4pm cutoff for using my off-peak return ticket, then spent the coin fund on a non-numismatic book whilst waiting for the 7 o'clock Oh well....... Quote
Leo Posted September 20, 2017 Posted September 20, 2017 This has been very quiet lately... I will post a classic piece I bought last month. Nothing extraordinary about it - If it had a George III stamp it would be worth 5 times more! 1 Quote
Sword Posted September 21, 2017 Posted September 21, 2017 23 hours ago, Leo said: This has been very quiet lately... I will post a classic piece I bought last month. Nothing extraordinary about it - If it had a George III stamp it would be worth 5 times more! Iconic coin and very appealing design. I am hoping to get an 8 reales in high grade at some point. Quote
Leo Posted September 21, 2017 Posted September 21, 2017 I'd love something like this, but afraid out of my price range... The good thing of being such popular coins is that they are very liquid and can be bought and sold virtually anywhere, and their price is fairly stable. That gives a peace of mind. The bad thing is that you will have to fight for every one of them in auctions and the chinese are buying many now. Not to mention americans - as these coins were legal tender in the US their collectors are avid for them. Quote
mrbadexample Posted September 29, 2017 Posted September 29, 2017 Couple of nice trial strikes. 2 Quote
Leo Posted September 30, 2017 Posted September 30, 2017 The reverse die of the centavo broke nicely! Good it was a trial Quote
mrbadexample Posted September 30, 2017 Posted September 30, 2017 10 minutes ago, Leo said: The reverse die of the centavo broke nicely! Good it was a trial Interestingly, the picture in my edition of Krause shows the same die cracks. Quote
Leo Posted September 30, 2017 Posted September 30, 2017 That is very interesting. It could be the same die in just slightly different degree of deterioration. Do you know the mintage figure? Incidentally, they are very nice. Lovely acquisition. Quote
mrbadexample Posted September 30, 2017 Posted September 30, 2017 6 minutes ago, Leo said: That is very interesting. It could be the same die in just slightly different degree of deterioration. Do you know the mintage figure? Incidentally, they are very nice. Lovely acquisition. There's no mintage listed in Krause so I don't know. I wouldn't have thought it would be particularly high though, so I'm a bit surprised by the extent of the die cracks. Quote
Rob Posted September 30, 2017 Posted September 30, 2017 The thing with trial strikes is that they are a bit of an unknown. If you look at the decimal patterns of the late 1850s, many of the flans laminated. The striking pressures will be different for the previous issue of copper pennies compared to that required for the thinner bronze equivalent. In the case of the 1/20th of a shilling pattern halfpenny, all known examples have this defect as does the unique F689 and probably other things struck on a flan of similar thickness. What cannot be known or appreciated by the layman is the number of unpublished failures suffered before they got it right. Anything that failed to make adopted status will be frozen in time, so a cracked die remains just that. 1 Quote
davidrj Posted September 30, 2017 Author Posted September 30, 2017 On 9/29/2017 at 1:20 AM, mrbadexample said: Couple of nice trial strikes. Circulation issue of the above, with privy marks for Paris mint. A single year type difficult in high grade 1 Quote
mrbadexample Posted September 30, 2017 Posted September 30, 2017 3 minutes ago, davidrj said: Circulation issue of the above, with privy marks for Paris mint. A single year type difficult in high grade Do you know if the trials were also minted in Paris David? I had made that assumption but don't know if it's correct. Quote
davidrj Posted September 30, 2017 Author Posted September 30, 2017 48 minutes ago, mrbadexample said: Do you know if the trials were also minted in Paris David? I had made that assumption but don't know if it's correct. my assumption too, i wonder if a specialized Bolivian catalogue exists with more info Quote
zookeeperz Posted October 1, 2017 Posted October 1, 2017 Not my photo thankfully.. Bought this for peanuts awaiting its arrival. Scarce Variety Obverse 1 1884 Cent. Quote
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