Sword Posted August 29, 2016 Posted August 29, 2016 6 hours ago, Paulus said: It's interesting that some Edward VII coins can tone so darkly around the legend leaving the rest of the coin untoned and lustrous. Here are a couple examples of mine. They are common coins but I like the tone. Quote
Rob Posted August 29, 2016 Posted August 29, 2016 2 hours ago, Nordle11 said: Are the striations in the field from die polishing? Probably from contact with something it was held in. There is nothing to be seen in hand, only when the flash is used. Polishing lines on the die tend to be obvious in hand and are raised in any case. Quote
Rob Posted August 29, 2016 Posted August 29, 2016 (edited) P778. This is Peck's own piece which had the weight erroneously given as 157.3 grains. The weight is actually 115.7grains with the 1 footnote numeral taken from the weight and the footnote 3 numeral incorporated into the weight. Anyone with a copy of Peck will understand what I mean. Edited August 30, 2016 by Rob 1 Quote
Nick Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 10 hours ago, Sword said: Here are a couple examples of mine. They are common coins but I like the tone. Lovely frosty lustre on that halfcrown. What are the assigned grades on those two? Quote
copper123 Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 whats pecks 1718 copper halfpenny doing in a milled silver post ? Love the last 8 being out of line BTW Quote
ozjohn Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 Sword, You are right about the toning on Edward coins. Here's my 1902 HC not to the same extent as yours but a similar effect. I've never noticed it before Quote
Rob Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 (edited) 26 minutes ago, copper123 said: whats pecks 1718 copper halfpenny doing in a milled silver post ? Love the last 8 being out of line BTW A silver halfpenny in a milled silver post - what's wrong with that? Check your copy of Peck (2nd ed. p.200 refers) and read back what the description says. Edited August 30, 2016 by Rob Quote
ozjohn Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 4 hours ago, Nick said: Nice coin they're finally minting them correctly just before the design change. Quote
VickySilver Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 Please see if you spot the significance of the above 1868 3d. I am not entirely sure it is not a lightly handled Maundy issue - and this comes from one who loves the series (guess readers might have guessed that). Quote
Rob Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 (edited) 19 minutes ago, VickySilver said: Please see if you spot the significance of the above 1868 3d. I am not entirely sure it is not a lightly handled Maundy issue - and this comes from one who loves the series (guess readers might have guessed that). I would expect to see some sets with an example if they were issued in them. If you don't know of any, I would think it more likely they were currency. Also, what is the grade distribution? Most maundy coins didn't circulate, even in the fullness of time, so a maundy issue should be heavily skewed towards a high grade population, leaving aside the fact that people look for them. Edited August 30, 2016 by Rob Quote
VickySilver Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 (edited) Bull has them listed as Maundy as well.....Really the strike is better than one would consider for a currency - although many currencies in the late 1860s were of better strike quality. Admittedly, Bull has many errors.... RRITANNIAR are very scarce to rare in higher grades, this from an old Spink list - from the halcyon days! Edited August 30, 2016 by VickySilver Quote
Nick Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 38 minutes ago, VickySilver said: Please see if you spot the significance of the above 1868 3d. I am not entirely sure it is not a lightly handled Maundy issue - and this comes from one who loves the series (guess readers might have guessed that). Could it be a maundy die that was later used for currency? The annual reports show that there were 43 obverse dies used for 1,469,592 currency 3d pieces and 3 obverse dies for 7,704 maundy 3d pieces. If just one of those dies contained the error, it's unlikely that there were originally more than 10 or 20 thousand RRITANNIAR minted. It does seem unusual that the error was not corrected, given the number of B over R in BRITTANIAR that exist in other denominations. Quote
brg5658 Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 1 hour ago, Coppers said: From Vicky Silver's collection... Scarce variety and all, I was surprised to see that PCGS graded this coin problem free. The rim damage at 10 o'clock on the obverse would likely preclude a straight grade most of the time. Quote
Nick Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 49 minutes ago, jaggy said: I don't know what chemicals are contained in the lining of those 1911 proof set boxes, but they certainly do produce some wacky colourful toning. Quote
Rob Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 28 minutes ago, VickySilver said: Bull has them listed as Maundy as well.....Really the strike is better than one would consider for a currency - although many currencies in the late 1860s were of better strike quality. Admittedly, Bull has many errors.... RRITANNIAR are very scarce to rare in higher grades, this from an old Spink list - from the halcyon days! I'm open minded about everything in the latest ESC given the lack of proof reading evident. How many 1868 maundy sets have people seen? As Nick said, there were allegedly 3 dies used which should be possible to identify. If it is possible to identify three non-RR dies, then the latter should reasonably be a currency die. Quote
VickySilver Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 Yes, might have gotten the push for the date - although this is a threepence that is blown up to about 100X size! LOL! Really bad clashed dies on reverse as well. This along with the Dritanniar 1878 are my favourites of the lettering errors when in pristine (that one is a "64"). Quote
brg5658 Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 3 minutes ago, Nick said: Absolutely LOVE this 1911. 1 Quote
jaggy Posted August 30, 2016 Posted August 30, 2016 14 minutes ago, Nick said: I don't know what chemicals are contained in the lining of those 1911 proof set boxes, but they certainly do produce some wacky colourful toning. I do have another 1911 proof which is not as 'wacky'. But the reverse is still nicely toned and more so than in many of the currency pieces. Quote
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