GTG--and now for something completerly different!
TPRC
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Ha Ha Ha....not sure how they grade these but somehow I think they got it right.
Tom
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Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.
These grades are relative IMO, and an EF specimen is not necessarily better than VF or worse than AU.
I always wondered how these plastic chits got into the catalog and wider acceptance than many other such similar items from around the world.
Well, just Love coins, period.
Tom
Not sure about the grade- interesting item.
How rare is this anyway?
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
Tom
LINK TO PCGS CERT VERIFY
TalerUniverse.com is a curated numismatic project dedicated to the silver talers, crowns, and medals of the Habsburg Empire and the Holy Roman Empire, spanning the 16th–18th centuries. The collection emphasizes historically significant issues, rare mint varieties, and high-grade NGC/PCGS examples, presented with detailed historical context, scholarly references, and high-resolution photography. TalerUniverse aims to serve both as a private collection showcase and a growing reference resource for collectors, researchers, and students of early-modern European coinage.
<< <i>This is cool!
LINK TO PCGS CERT VERIFY >>
<< <i>View this coin in PCGS CoinFacts >>
Ha! Yeah. Right.
Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.
I am more surprised that someone paid for a TruView on this item, then I am about the slabbing and catalog acceptance. I've seen too many things in slabs to be surprised by ivorine. Especially considering it's over a hundred years old, made way before world coin collecting in the USA (aka NCLT) became popular (mid '70s?).
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<< <i>If it's plastic (or ivorine) ... is it really "mintage?" or molded-age? (moldage?) or cast-age? production run?) I guess what I'm really asking is, did they strike it?
I am more surprised that someone paid for a TruView on this item, then I am about the slabbing and catalog acceptance. I've seen too many things in slabs to be surprised by ivorine. Especially considering it's over a hundred years old, made way before world coin collecting in the USA (aka NCLT) became popular (mid '70s?). >>
I guess "moldage" would be the correct term, even if you just minted it (the term, I mean).
And yes, these are neat. They're the only nonmetallic "coins" I can think of that are classified as coins rather than tokens, unless someone can correct me? I mean, I know there's porcelain notgeld and fiber tokens and such, but those are all considered exonumia.
I can think of one other exception offhand, which are those 1942 pattern cents minted (er- molded?) in plastic and other materials by the US Mint (presumably in the leadup to the adoption of zinc-coated steel cents in 1943).
As to TrueViews, I think that's neat, too, if a bit crammed-up looking. And the OP is not the only person who's had a non-round coin TrueViewed.
Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.
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PS- and not just square and rectangular, either. I want one of those "Bermuda Triangle" gold pieces. There's a modern series I really like.
Collector since 1976. On the CU forums here since 2001.