I always wanted a BAR Cent and a Nova

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by dwhiz, Oct 27, 2010.

  1. dwhiz

    dwhiz Collector Supporter

    Today I found this site www.coinreplicas.com so I ordered one of each. The photo's are from their site, but I did photoscape them. Check them out.:thumb: Maaybe some day I will be able to aford the real thing!
     

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  3. coinman0456

    coinman0456 Coin Collector

    Save your money, don't buy foolish items and you will get what you want.
     
  4. dwhiz

    dwhiz Collector Supporter

    Thanks for the advise, but for 15 bucks each I be a sport.
    Plus it's good to help an American company!
    Remember to Vote Nov 2nd- vote early and vote often!
     
  5. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    Well they are not deceptive enough to fool an experienced collector, and they are marked COPY, but they are still not legal. The size of the COPY marking is much too small to comply with the Hobby Protection Act. By law the word has to be 2 mm high by 6 mm long and 1/2 mm deep.
     
  6. abe

    abe LaminatedLincolnCollector

    My Bar Cent copy has much larger letters, probably 3x that of the one pictured...
     
  7. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

  8. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    Hah - Call NYPD
     
  9. vnickels

    vnickels Matt Draiss Numismatics & Galleries

    The bar cent is probably one of the most boring and unartisitic designs in U.S. history. St. Gaudens would puick if he saw them.
     
  10. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

  11. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    That would be incorrect..

    FWIW - the St Gauden's double eagle is the most unimaginative and overate art designs ever done and it was lifted whole from a painting.

    The Bar cent was a bold and modernistic design, a 100 years before its time, beautiful in its simplicity and deeply moving, a grand expression of the new American Nation and its spirit.

    I don't know why people are so excited by St Gauden. He was an artist of moderate ability and no imagination..not that many coin designers are any better. St Gaud was no Van Gough
     
  12. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    And was lifted whole from a button. :)
     
  13. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    wiseguy
     
  14. 10gary22

    10gary22 Junior Member

    Nice copy, if that's what you want. I am just not into fakes much. I mean, why not collect pictures of real coins instead ? But, as stated, you collect what YOU want, the beauty of being American !
     
  15. Leadfoot

    Leadfoot there is no spoon

  16. rotobeast

    rotobeast Old Newbie

    Still cranky, eh Reub ?
    :D
     
  17. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

  18. mrbrklyn

    mrbrklyn New Member

    BTW - Modern graphic designers would get paid big money to get a font that good.
     
  19. CheetahCats

    CheetahCats Colonial & Early American

    It's nice that you're interested in these. However, I'm not a proponent of replica coins. With the "COPY" punch that small, it wouldn't take much to whizz it off and dupe some unsuspecting newb.
     
  20. Conder101

    Conder101 Numismatist

    And that is how I took it. I needled, you needled back, all in fun.

    The pictures show a very small COPY, but in his later post he indicated that the punch was actually much larger and in compliance with the HPA. And trying to buff it off or do damge to the coin in order to hide it wouldn't help. Accorcing to the website selling them they are copper plated pewter. Any artifical wear or scratching/damage would expose the silver colored core. Of course ou could replate it afterwards.
     
  21. CheetahCats

    CheetahCats Colonial & Early American

    Indeed, for this manufacturer perhaps. For every manufacturer that plates as such, there's another that doesn't - if not many times more. Time passes, and next thing that happens, granddad's replica becomes a family heirloom long after granddad is gone.

    The HPA doesn't go far enough. Replica coins should be made proportionally larger or smaller [in diameter] than the originals; much like US Code mandates for copies of currency.
     
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