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bill

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Everything posted by bill

  1. Have you considered Capitol Plastics mounts? I have always liked them and have a Roosevelt set in one for 30 years with no obvious problems.
  2. Yes, they gained their independence the old fashioned way, they asked the queen for permission and continue to say thank you by using her portrait on their coins.
  3. I like the Lord's Prayer piece (for obvious reasons). As for the man himself, I think we Americans were more than pleased to commemorate his passing.
  4. Okay, it looks like any of the many aluminum medals that appear earlier in the thread. That would seem to be the case except this so-called dollar (Hibler & Kappen 245A) is not documented anywhere in aluminum, just brass and copper. Today it is unique. Tomorrow, another one may turn up like this one did. For the time being, it is the rarest item in my collection.
  5. He's had them listed for about a year now. I paid 5 for mine!
  6. My latest, from the 1905 Lewis and Clark Centennial Exposition in Portland. One normally thinks of encased cents, but this is an encased Lord's Prayer token with the exposition logo design on the obverse.
  7. That's Pike's Peak in the center distance. It doesn't quite look like the medal either.
  8. The most expensive piece in this collection was $85. Most were $10 or less (all prices include postage).
  9. 1985 Annual Convention in Baltimore Designed by Henry W. Schab and N. Neil Harris Sculpted by David E. Castruccio Struck by Medallic Art Co., Danbury, CT. Mintage: 1,500
  10. 1963 Annual Convention in Denver Designed by Charles L. Nelson Struck by Medallic Art Co., New York, NY Mintage: 2,350
  11. 1958 Annual Convention in Los Angeles Designed by G. Lee Kuntz Struck by Leavens Mfg. Co., Attleboro, MA Mintage: 1,350, 55 10K gold filled.
  12. Two new (well old and older) medals:
  13. I do think you've found the right place to look.
  14. I use a Nikon D70 with a 60mm f/2.8 Micro lens. Images are shot on a copy stand with axial lighting. I use the computer to manage the camera setting and trip the shutter to minimize vibration. Images are then processed and assembled in Photoshop.
  15. I.think the zoom feature is happening in your browser. The various image sizes are produced in flickr depending on the size of the image you upload. Linking to the largest image sizes it to your browser with the magnifying capability. That doesn't happen when you are on flickr so the page you start from may have some control over how your browser displays the image. I really don't know for sure.
  16. I don't even recognize the style. I suspect its modern.
  17. Yes, the pin has been repaired, but it is a Schwaab product. I don't know about the medal. The same stock liberty head design was used on other medals for other events. It could be Schwaab or it could be another manufacturer combining their product with a Schwaab pin. While Schwaab was based in Milwaukee, they marketed their services nation wide.
  18. 1907 Store Card The obverse features Swedish inventor, John Ericsson. Ericsson constructed the Union ironclad, Monitor. The die is assumed to have been made in 1903 for an Ericsson commemorative and reused by Elder for the 1907 Fulton celebration.Hanson of Chicago created both dies. This medal is copper. The issue included 1 in Gold, 3 in Silver, 25 Copper, 26 Brass, 3 White Metal, 153 Aluminum, 3 Lead, and 4 Fiber.
  19. Another new piece for me, one of the medalettes pictured above adapted to a stickpin by Schwaab Stamp and Seal. I don't know if that means they produced the medal as well, but it is a starting point. May 2011: Found a higher grade piece for my collection. Note the the same soldering technique on both pins leading me to believe both are original.
  20. I am not familiar with the Polish medals referenced,but these last two medals are spectacular!
  21. I know the approximate location of the building and it housed several die sinkers in early San Francisco (actually maybe all of them). The building burned in the 1906 earthquake. The area is very different today.
  22. C.A. Klinkner, 1892 in San Francisco. Klinkner issued a number of different tokens. The one pictured here is an early aluminum token.
  23. Far from the smallest, although the text is small. It does claim to be the smallest page ever coined. Close, but its not actually the smallest. It is an early use of aluminum (1892) and it is an early California die sinker (C.A. Klinkner).
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