Why not go one step further and use silver coins to sanitize the bowl? The antimicrobial action of silver is well known. See https://microbewiki.kenyon.edu/index.php/Silver_as_an_Antimicrobial_Agent for a review. So get a plastic net bag, and put a few of your least-liked silver coins in it. Then tie one end of a nylon cord around the neck of the bag and the other end around the tank-bowl junction. Adjust the cord length so the bag is suspended in the bowl. Voila! ... All those nasty germs will meet a silvery death! First one to post a picture will get a big like from me as long as the toilet has been flushed first. Cal
I would love to have that toilet seat in MY bathroom, with this➡ flooring Shout out to @Kirkuleez 'cause i believe this IS his bathroom iirc. Damn kirk, u almost HAVE to get one of those seats imo
I hope whoever made that floor put 1 penny the opposite side so the kids could have fun searching for it when they came over
I haven't found enough clean and natural cents yet. I'm doing it all out of wheats and need some red, some brown and some RB...thousands of each. It's been very tedious. I was going to do the red ones reverse side up and the rest will be obverse up. I don't think that I've kept anything older than the forties though. Kind of felt wrong to take collectible earlier ones to make into a floor.
You can get them out. With a lot of patience, it's possible. I'll post some pictures of coins I've got out of lucite. The good thing is, the lucite does not bond to coin. So once you free the majority of it, the coin can be pulled out.
I can't get past the fact that it's used. I'm not exactly a Howie Mandel or Felix Unger type, butt....
Yeah - but in this case everything looks polished before it went into the seat. None of them are probably worth saving. I saw one once somewhere - but everything in it was modern, no silver. They still wanted like $75 or $80 for it. Interesting, but not my cup of tea.