| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| Dark room forum. http://www.iceteks.com/forums/show.php/showtopic/1932 |
| brandon - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| Which forum???? |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| I should try too. Hmm, how about I start a make your own dollar bill thread. |
| brandon - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| I could mess around with a few things in GIMP, and make my own bill which would be way better than Tak's but I'm tired. Anyway, I live life on the edge, so why not. BTW Tak, a new dev version is available. |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| LOL That's funny. It will definatly get handy for those 5.12379 purchases. |
| Chris Vogel - Jan-20-2004 server time | ||
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| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| We cover pretty much all the important animals. They missed the squirrel though, maybe they can make a $500 bill or something. |
| Chris Vogel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| The Queen... We should also have $5 coins. They should have a picture of Napoleon. Enough with the eagles... How about a cat for a change? |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
Found this:![]() We in fact do have $1,000 bills. Was not sure. For some reason that picture does not include the $5 bill. |
| brandon - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| I know Tak!!!! |
| Chris Vogel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| Photo of one-dollar coin |
| brandon - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| Yes, but I have one of those two rare things. In fact, I have quite a few of them. |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| wow that must be rare. I'm not even sure if canada has those... I think the highest is $100 but I could be wrong. |
| brandon - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| You know something really rare??? The $1000, $5000, and $10,000 bills. THey stopped making those in the 30's, and they also stopped making gold coins around that same time. |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| Ah, so basically they stopped making them and make paper only. I'm sure there's still cad 2$ bills going around but I have not seen one in a long time overhere. If I'd find one, I probably would not spend it. |
| brandon - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| They're still around, but they're not in circulation. |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| So I'm sure lot of people got mixed up. |
| Chris Vogel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| We still have them. I never see any of them though. |
| brandon - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| The US had dollar coins. We had the Sacagawea dollar, and we had the Susan B anthony coin, but the Susan B anthony one looked to much like a quarter. |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| The US does not have dollar coins? I always thought they did. We have: 1cent 5cent 10cent 25cent 1$ 2$ The 2$ is the newest, I remember when they introduced it. Quite a while back though. |
| Wren - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| I think the reason the dollar coins never caught on in the US, they looked too much like a quarter. Dollar coins are convenient but are heavy in the purse! |
| Chris Vogel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| We had dollar coins, but they never really caught on. Coins are more convenient for me. |
| Red Squirrel - Jan-20-2004 server time |
| http://www.thetoque.com/040120/shatnercoin.htm THE ROYAL CANADIAN MINT-- Canada is ready to phase-in the country's first five-dollar circulation coin. Gaining approval and royal ascent for the proclamation authorizing the issue and prescribing the composition, dimensions, and design of the new coin has been a long trek, but with Canada's continuing mission to reduce the amount of paper money in circulation, a five-dollar coin was the next step. To coin a phrase, "It was only logical." The new 9.2-gram Canadian coin features an effigy of William Shatner, national hero and star of film and television. The Ministry of Public Works and Government Services has been committed to replacing paper money with coins. Millions of dollars in printing costs will be saved with the five-dollar coin, although the initial minting of $600 million worth of coins is expected to be snatched up by collectors at warp speed. Minted coins typically have a circulation life of 25 years before they are ultimately destroyed by being placed on railroad tracks or inevitably lost down storm drains. In comparison, paper currency lasts approximately two weeks in circulation before it is irretrievably marred by tears, destroyed in your laundry, or defaced with curly ink moustaches. William Shatner was chosen to be represented on the coin because of his status as a hero to Canadians, and especially the science fiction community, which makes up approximately 80% of the Canadian population. Most Canadian coins are composed of standard base metals. However with Shatner on the face, they thought it more appropriate to go with a heavier metal, and ultimately chose a nickel-plated tritanium alloy. Shatner beamed with joy when told he had been selected to be on the face of the coin. "I can't...tell you...how happy I am," he said in halting English. "No bones about it. I hope these coins...live long...and prosper...like my career." This coin is not a limited edition currency, but it is expected that Canadian collectors will cling-on to these coins like a rare Romulan ale--at least for the first few star-dates. Numismatists expect that for the first few months, people will have to trek for kilometres to find a bank or government office that will have them in stock, and cross-border traffic is expected to increase by warp factor 10, as Star Trek nerds will be flocking to Canada faster than fans to a nude Jolene Blalock (T'Pol) website. Enthusiasts are searching for a nickname for the new coin. "We've got the 'loonie' ($1 coin), and we've got the 'toonie' ($2 coin)," said Noonian Singh, coin collector and Shatner fan. "So what will we call this enterprise? The Shatty? Kirk's Koin? You'd think that the 'Trekkie' would be the logical choice, but there's just no telling what humans in the early 21st Century will ultimately decide." The original concept for having (Bill) Shatner minted comes from the years that the Canadian $5 bill was altered using a blue ballpoint pen. The bill ostensibly shows Wilfred Laurier, a former Prime Minister. A few clever marks transformed the staid former Member of Parliament into the character "Spock" from the original television series. Coincidence? Leonard Nimoy is not a Canadian, but his former captain is. "We want people to use this coin," said Paul Gilbert of the Royal Canadian Mint. "We don't want them to think it's some phoney carnival token. Believe me, this coin is as real as the hair on Shatner's head..." |