Topherclaus
Active Member
I don't know what it is, but for me a silver coin should be silver, no gilding, no colouring of any kind, and I find the colours tacky to say the least.
Is it just me?
Is it just me?
Holdfast said:I love coloured coins.
The coloured Lunar Dragons are superb.
http://i874.photobucket.com/albums/...arcoloureddragonperth040-Copy_zps713de554.jpg
SilverPete said:Classic coloured Panda : http://forums.silverstackers.com/topic-59447-colorized-panda.html
http://forums.silverstackers.com/uploads/14291_painted_panda.jpg
Source: Gatito Bandito
1for1 said:I think most people hate them and consider them inferior to standard bullion, of course it depends on the particular coin / bullion in question but overall its a waste of time and money (usually you pay a premium which like a firecracker goes up in smoke not long after you purchase it!)
An odd-looking Canadian coin with a bright red flower has been found to be the cause behind a US Defence Department's false espionage warning earlier this year, The Associated Press has learned.
The odd-looking - but harmless - "poppy coin" was so unfamiliar to suspicious US Army contractors travelling in Canada that they filed confidential espionage accounts about them.
The worried contractors described the coins as "anomalous" and "filled with something man-made that looked like nano-technology," according to once-classified US government reports and emails obtained by the AP.
The silver-coloured 25-cent piece, known popularly as a quarter, features the red image of a poppy - Canada's flower of remembrance - inlaid over a maple leaf.
...
The confidential accounts led to a sensational warning from the US Defence Security Service, an agency of the Defence Department, that mysterious coins with radio frequency transmitters had been found planted on US contractors with classified security clearances.
The service said the coins had been found on at least three separate occasions between October 2005 and January 2006 as the contractors traveled through Canada.
One contractor believed someone had placed two of the quarters in an outer coat pocket after the contractor had emptied the pocket hours earlier.
"Coat pockets were empty that morning and I was keeping all of my coins in a plastic bag in my inner coat pocket," the contractor wrote.
But the Defence Department subsequently acknowledged that it could never substantiate the espionage alarm that it had put out and launched the internal review that turned up the true nature of the mysterious coin.
Meanwhile, in Canada, senior intelligence officials expressed annoyance with the American spy-coin warnings as they tried to learn more about the oddball claims.
The US Defence Security Service disavowed its warning about spy coins after an international furor, but until now it has never disclosed the details behind the episode.