Bimetallic coins have become popular in many countries during the past few years, predominantly used for a country's highest denomination coin. The Czech Republic struch large numbers of these for circulation in 1993, but there was a wide public preference for the 50 Korun (Crown) note, so the coin was seldon encountered in general circulation. This seems to have changed during the past couple of years, perhaps due to the central bank ceasing to issue the paper fifty, although I have no real evidence of this. There have been several attempts to introduce a dollar coin into circulation in the United States, but the general public prefer to use the paper version. I can't understand why the US government simply ceases the issue of one dollar notes, as occured in many countries including the UK, Australia, Taiwan, New Zealand and I'm sure many others.........
Sunday, May 25, 2008
Thursday, May 22, 2008
Great Britain Two Shillings 1964 Off Centre
The British milled predecimal misstrike is another seldom seen item, this 1964 florin is a particularly nice example. British coinage was redesigned in 1953 to coincide with Elizabeth the Second coming to the throne. These designs were in circulation until the changeover to decimal currency in 1971.
Friday, May 16, 2008
1927 USA Peace Dollar?
NUMBER 5. This week we have something a little different. It appears to be an American dollar coin from 1927, but in actual fact it is a cheap chinese copy, or COUNTERFEIT, purchased at a market in Taipei very cheaply. Alongside it were a wide selection of fake world crowns, with a bias toward chinese and US coins. They were not sold as genuine, and any collector worth their salt would not be fooled by the soft detail, light weight, dull ring and badly recut date. However I have seen fakes of this type being sold as genuine both online and in shops. Also, more worrying are the high quality forgeries also coming out of China, I've personally seen some very very good counterfeit US Trade Dollars, and French Indo-China piastres. It's definately a case of buyer beware........
Friday, May 9, 2008
New Zealand 198? Off Centre Fifty Cents
NUMBER 4. This week we have a real find. Being a New Zealander I'm always on the lookout for New Zealand off centre error coins, but they just aren't out there! Needless to say I was suitably stoked to stumble accross this large sized beauty some years ago........
Labels:
centre,
coin,
error,
misstrike,
new zealand,
off center
Friday, May 2, 2008
Australia 1950 Off Centre Penny
Large sized off centre strikes are always impressive, and this Aussie penny is no exception. While Australian misstrikes such as this are relatively scarce, it's easier to find pre decimal examples than post 1966 decimal strikes, presumably due to the fact that a new mint was built in Canberra for the decimal changeover, which had better quality control than the old mints in Melbourne and Perth.
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