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Replies: 18 / Views: 4,845 |
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Valued Member
Canada
488 Posts |
I have had this long before I started collecting. Thought id share. The coins appear to be plated with gold or something goldish. Hard to capture in the pic.  
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Pillar of the Community
United States
932 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6478 Posts |
Quite the intriguing belt buckle. Very nice.
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Valued Member
 Canada
488 Posts |
Ive always had it tucked away but I may stsrt wearing it.
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Pillar of the Community
1325 Posts |
All I have is an Ike belt buckle from years past. I wonder why those coins were chosen?
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Valued Member
 Canada
488 Posts |
Yeah. I'm not sure why they were chosen. I see others like it on ebay but not any that are plated. Accept a bulle one.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4932 Posts |
I would have liked it 100000x more if all the coins weren't cleaned!
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Valued Member
 Canada
488 Posts |
Yeah. There so clean that before I got into collecting I just thought they were fake.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7390 Posts |
In the 70s it was common to polish coins and encase them in Lucite for all sorts of purposes from paperweights to toilet seats to apparently belt buckles. In fact, finding a mid century coin encased in Lucie that hasn't been wizzed is the rarity. Cool belt buckle  What I find Strange is that they used the obverse and reverse of the same coin on the buff but it's like they are saying the wheat is the reverse to the IHC. I wonder if it was intentional or purposeful 
Edited by Cascade 09/26/2015 7:46 pm
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Sort of makes me wonder why those coins and why those dates.
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Moderator
 United States
187702 Posts |
Very nice. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4932 Posts |
Cascade - They still do it now, minus maybe the cleaning part, or here and there. They make coin toilet seats and put Morgan $'s in them. Can't help but think you are indirectly pooping on a morgan, or at least sitting on one while you do your bizz
Edited by CoinHuntingDrew 09/26/2015 10:01 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4932 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4932 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
593 Posts |
I got a nice money clip with a Canadian 1958 BC silver Dollar as a pocket Piece that is cool that my grandson gave me since I helped him become a future coin collector. I helped him out with my first LWC set from 1909-1958 missing 10 keys that I started when I 10 yrs old. and got hunting from my paper route in Iowa when cents you could find. About the age I did. And will get it all someday. And probably buy from You guys
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
3692 Posts |
Jewellers will polish all metal on their work simply out of tradition - something that most cannot escape because it feels right and they think that other jewelers will laugh at them if they present an unpolished metal. Personally, I hate this practice when it comes to coins because it shows their ignorance on coin collecting. It just shows that you can't know it all. The polishing is not even done well on the coins. It wasn't even a mere buffing on an uncirculated surface, more likely it was a prepolish and then a buff on a circulated coin. Evidence is in the Native's hairlines, the wheat, the headdress, and the buffalo's hide - everywhere. Normally it's considered damage to fade or blur lines to the point that the detail is lost. That's like grinding out an engraving - it's sacrilege and sloppy work. The rest is nice though. What I find strange is that there are two Buffalo nickels showing each major side, but with the pennies there's one "Indian" and one wheatie, so a non-collector looking in would think that there are only two coin types being displayed.
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Replies: 18 / Views: 4,845 |