Talk:Hobo nickel
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The webpage posted on the OHNS website is one I generated using Steve's material at his request and obviously with his permission. I'm not certain why you think that my posting of this material to Wikipedia is a copyright infringement. Verne R. Walrafen 29 June 2005 22:16 (UTC)
Contents |
[edit] Hobo Nickels/Temp created.
OK folks... I've made all your suggested changes and moved the pictures down into the text since you wanted to stack the three all in the center which looked really gross. The only thing I put back in that you blew away is the reference giving the provenance of the article... the fact Steve gave this material in a talk at the Long Beach Coin Show. I feel this really needs to be included and someplace in your material I even read that such things should be certain to be included. I trust you won't have problems with the TEMP version I just created. I note you were right there to catch my first attempt at posting... I can only hope you will respond just as quickly to my modifications so I can get this page up and running. I got locked out all day yesterday because I was flagged as using an IP address of someone who had done something wrong when my IP address was something totally different. I proved that with PING but nobody responded or changed my being blocked. Once I "got in" today I haven't logged off in case something similar happened again. Thanks- Verne
[edit] Hobo Nickels/Temp created.
Whoops... forgot my timestamp. Verne R. Walrafen 29 June 2005 23:16 (UTC)
[edit] Suggestion for illustration
I think it would really help illustrate this article if there were a picture of an unaltered coin directly next to the picture of the altered version, so that readers could see how the features of the original coin were used. Perhaps there could even be three versions, with the unaltered, altered, and an overlay of the two. Anyway, just a suggestion. -- Creidieki 06:06, 19 May 2006 (UTC)
[edit] Softness?
The article says that the nickels were the coin of choice for alteration because of their relative softness. However, the article on the nickel talks about how hard the coin is. The cent or silver coins would have been softer. Perhaps a better explantion for the popularity of the nickel for these purposes was that it was a large coin for the money and that it had a lot of raised surface area to work with. But I'm not an expert by any means.--RLent 19:16, 14 July 2006 (UTC)
[edit] how to ?
How do you carve a nickel? What tools do you use? Do you pound it flat first?