My enamelled Victorian Shilling 1887 came this morning. Im very happy the enamel is in great shape,and this specimen would definitely sell for more than my investment.
I understand that the coin itself is genuine. I am thinking the paint job is someone's idea of a clever add on at some later time, rather than being issued by the Royal Mint in that fashion.
Paint job lol ....no its a process that was done back in the 1800's similar to a love token . They were very much in vogue at the turn of the century. And they do have a audience mostly European ,prices go up in the thousands for certain series......if you ever seen a Burmese peacock coin ....those were so well done the colors and art work unbelievable.
I just did some reading about these enameled coins and noticed some high prices. Thanks, I learned something. I have a number of nice Jubilee head British coins, love the design. Here are a couple of 'colorized' coins, fairly new acquisitions. The Canadian 25 cent looks like it was done with a sharpie!
And I'm so pleased you have learned something, they still make enameled coins modern, not like the one I posted...but 1 color then a clear glass coat to protect. If you see one and have questions pm me....I have the book, and can advise pass or buy. On a search use the English spelling "enamelled" two L's that will get you closer to availble coins on the market.
You can really learn a lot from these war time issues as well. You can tell that they were preparing for something as early as 1938 as they went from a large (3.75 g 23 mm with 200 million coins minted in 1938 over 2 varieties) bronze 1 Sen (dated 1938) coin (worth about 1/2 US cent at the time) to a small aluminium coin (0.9 g 17.6 mm 440million minted) (dated 1939 but also minted in 1938). You can see this across other issues such as the 5 Sen and 10 Sen coins. Almost like they were using the copper and nickel preparing for other things...
On the India rupees, I have not gotten around to learning much about die varieties, except for some of the early Victorias. I do that with Aachen XII hellers, which is great fun. This gem came yesterday, GB shilling 1916. At first I thought it had been cleaned or polished, then I examined more carefully and self graded it a straight AU55.
I picked up 5 Switzerland 1974 coins today. I can't figure out if they are half of a mint set or from a proof set. I am thinking proof though. Seems that are no PL coins from this year and when I flood the coin with light you can see the cameo, which probably is not on a MS coin. Interesting...
Switzerland 1974 1 and 2 Franc coins. Proof. Unfortunately there is a scratch on each reverse that perhaps details them...