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ikaros

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Everything posted by ikaros

  1. I'm a little thin on cash this week, so when I stuck my $5 in the machine in the break room, I asked Lucky Pierre to thrill me only a little since I needed the change for bus fare. Lucky Pierre spat out a 1964D quarter in quite nice condition. Pictures when I get home. Edit: As promised, here it is!
  2. Ooo, I didn't know there was also a 5 centime piece! Gonna have to prowl eBay... I wonder why Besançon's issues are so much more artistically engraved; most of the rest are fairly utilitarian in design.
  3. I'm gonna vote no, but I've developed an appreciation for toners. If it really bugs you, I can provide my shipping address...
  4. Ironically, they have to put you on a die to put you on a coin...
  5. Yeah. The Greek mythology theme, the semi-Deco way it was executed... and it's just freakin' gorgeous. Also, the price was right; most of the ones of these I've seen on the Bay of E have been twice what I paid for this, and this one still had its original case (the red-brown thing it's sitting on in the picture). It's estimated to date from some time between 1946 and 1955, but I haven't been able to research a date certain yet. The image doesn't really give a good idea of just how deeply sculpted the design is. I may take a few more from different angles. The satyr rises a full 1/8" from the field, and the finish is absolutely satiny. I don't know if it was gilded or if that's the natural finish (I believe they were struck in bronze, and I though bronze would be darker). It's 21/8" across; the details on the back are just amazing.
  6. These are lovely! I only have one of these myself, a Ville de Besançon 10 centime piece from 1917, but it's been a favorite ever since I got it -- it's just so beautifully sculpted. And I really should get better pictures of it.
  7. Ooo, I hadn't thought about that. Yeah, I wouldn't object to the oak cluster and shield design for the reverse of the cent. I dunno about the quarter or the dollar. Gonna have to have a long cogitate on that. I can't imagine separating the Indian head from the Buffalo reverse, the Mercury obverse from the fasces reverse, and suggesting the Walking Lib without its magnificent eagle is numismatic heresy in my mind.
  8. If you disallow the current designs, I'll say the following (with my preference, if different, following in parens): 1c: Flying Eagle 5c: Buffalo (Shield) 10c: "Mercury" 25c: Seated Lib (Capped Bust) 50c: Walking Lib $1: Morgan (Seated Lib) And restore circulating commemorative halves.
  9. Welcome aboard! A friend of mine was trying to learn some coin magic; he bought himself some lightly circulated British decimal "crowns" for the purpose since they're comparable to American silver dollars in size. I suppose the key thing is that the coin be large enough to be seen, and shiny enough to assist in being seen... There is something appealing about a really large coin -- they have so much room to play, design-wise.
  10. ...and okay, part of me wants to see the conspiracy theorists' heads explode if a coin bears the reverse of the Great Seal. I know, I'm a bad person sometimes.
  11. There wouldn't be any agreement on historical political figures; the only ones who get a free pass are the Big Three -- Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln. You *might* get agreement on Teddy Roosevelt; I can't think of anyone later than that (outside of Ike, who's already had his turn) that has any hope of being non-controversial. You almost have to go to Revolutionary War figures like Sam Adams, Thomas Paine and Ben Franklin (wouldn't mind seeing him on a coin again--I've always loved Franklin halves). Side note that I'm reminded of by mention of the American Revolution: the best typo I ever saw was in an e-book of Carl Sagan's -- I think it was The Demon-Haunted World -- that slipped one letter in Ethan Allen and turned it into Ethan Alien. Which brings to mind a completely different kind of green mountain boy. XD I think the only way to get everyone to sign off on it is to put Liberty on it -- which I would love to see. Or something similar to the Flying Eagle cent design, which has always been a favorite of mine. Perhaps the Statue of Liberty; I think it deserves better than the reverse of a series that's no longer issued for circulation. I'm going to reiterate a point that I've made before on this site, and I will always be willing to make again -- presidents don't belong on coins, at least not for a century past their term of office so that their contributions can be more fairly assessed. I would love to see the national symbols -- Liberty, the eagle, the flag, even the more obscure ones like the oak and the rose -- used on our coins. Political figures, with very few exceptions, are inherently divisive figures, especially those still within living memory.
  12. Funny you should mention, I have an H. Dropsy piece coming that I bought on a whim, just because I liked the combination of classical Greek and Art Deco styles. Maybe I do collect them now.
  13. Sweet find! I've always had a soft spot for Ikes.
  14. Given that the last half of the series didn't even circulate, honestly, I doubt it. Here's a thought -- other than the obvious solution of eliminating the dollar bill once and for all, what do you think they should try next to try to get public interest in a circulating dollar coin?
  15. Can't say for certain without seeing the reverse, but it looks to me like a Thai 10 baht from between 1988-2009. Thailand mints a romping ton of different designs, and I don't read the script anyway, but the portrait looks right. Do you have an image of the other side?
  16. I think there will be both Ford and Reagan dollars; as I recall, the procedure was if they passed away two years before the series got to them then they would be included and that living former presidents would simply be skipped. I suppose the lead time is so the dies can be prepared; if something should happen to any of our living former presidents now, it's too late to include them.
  17. Welcome! We have some similar interests -- I do British pre-decimal m'self -- as well as having started around the same age and being the same age.
  18. Yeah, I ditto your -- I wonder how they're going to grade out.
  19. About 5000 English coins dating back to the 11th century -- and if the pictures are representative, they look in remarkably good condition for having been buried for a millennium.
  20. Flickr is good; personally, I use Flickr for my "serious" photography, and TinyPic to host non-artistic images for posting in fora. Whichever works best for you.
  21. o.O You know, if I had seen this listed on the Bay of E as an XF-AU, I would have started a thread here with many, many laughing smilies... learn something new every day!
  22. Not money, but something I haven't already got:
  23. As they should be. We should eliminate the $1 bill and issue (more) $1 coins, and then a $2 coin. I'd even support cancelling the $5 bill and issuing a $5 coin. And while we're at it, restore Liberty to the coins, rather than arguing about which party's dead president should be thereon. I've said it before and I'll say again that no President should be on a coin until at least a century has passed so that they can be put in proper historical perspective, rather than added in the heat or the politics of the moment. The Presidential Dollar series is an appropriate exception since it's commemorating all the presidents and not memorializing just one. I can see my way clear to 'grandfathering' Washington, Jefferson and Lincoln. But I'd much really see Lady Liberty and other genuinely national symbols like the Bald Eagle, the Great Seal, or the flag returned to the coins -- or even some of the more obscure ones like the national flower (the rose) and the national tree (the oak).
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