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Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 02 Oct 2017 22:31
by Lorraine-Ellen
Thank you.

I am attaching pictures of the notes, hope you can see them Ok, had to resize them quite a bit.

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Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 02 Oct 2017 22:37
by Lorraine-Ellen
£10

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Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 03 Oct 2017 23:36
by Mac
They look to be quite nice.
You can send better pics to the main email address.
The B Series £50 is a scarce replacement note, a pity that it is damaged.
The £100, £50 Lavery notes would be worth at least 300 euro each, more if they are nice, up to 1000 Euro if in high grade. The £20 would be worth a couple of hundred if it doesn't have any creases.

EDIT: 14.20.27
These are in fact colour copies, currently being sold on ebay as 'colour copies'. In legal terms they are forgeries, as the A Series notes are still redeemable.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 04 Oct 2017 19:12
by Lorraine-Ellen
Ok, thank you. I have taken some out of their sleeves, however the only ones I couldn't take out where the £10 and the £1.

The scarce £50 with the tear unfortunately doesn't have the part that has been torn off.
I will send the clearer pictures of the others which I have taken out of the sleeves to the main email address.

Thank you for your help

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 05 Oct 2017 02:33
by Series B notes
Mac, I want to buy a Lady Lavery £100 note, and there is one in Good (G4) condition on Adverts for €165. It also has writing on the back, and a few edge nicks. Also it's dated 1975. How much should I expect to pay for it?

Also, I bought a £10 note dated 1990 on eBay in Unc? condition for €28, and it has significant edge wrinkles, small border ink mark, and rather large corner fold, and may have been pressed. Know the value?

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 05 Oct 2017 15:37
by Mac
@Series B Notes

Most sellers on ebay do not use the grading terms accurately.
Some sellers neglect to mention that a note has been cleaned, even though it may be obvious. A few current ebay sellers (three with active listings today) are likely actively cleaning notes.
Most ebay sellers are sound though.

I had a look at that £100. It hasn't been messed with or washed.
Considering that the face value is 127 Euro, 160 seems ok to me :)

That tenner you describe is worth just its face value in that condition.
You should ask for a refund, as by ebay rules if the description is not accurate you are entitled to return the item. Your rights of return are also covered by consumer rights legislation.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 07 Oct 2017 13:27
by Series B notes
In general, Mac, are soiled, torn, or scribbled-on notes worth only face value?

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 08 Oct 2017 12:41
by Mac
Series B notes wrote:In general, Mac, are soiled, torn, or scribbled-on notes worth only face value?
That would be the case with more recent Irish notes, unless they are rare.
Pre-1961 Irish notes tend to have some added value even in very low grade. 10/-, £20, £50, £100 Lavery notes will also often have a premium on them even in very low grade.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 12 Oct 2017 20:40
by Goldenaxe1
I have two WB Yeats 20 pound notes and was wondering what their value would be.They are very clean.No damaged corners or pen marks and no fold marks.They are dated 18 /11/87 one has an IEL serial number and the other one has a LEI serial number.They are circulated notes but are in very nice condition.I can't seem to be able to upload photos as it keeps telling me file is too big.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 14 Oct 2017 11:02
by Goldenaxe1
They have no folds at all and no marks.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 14 Oct 2017 12:43
by Series B notes
Hmmm.... But if they are circulated, wouldn't they have folds?

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 14 Oct 2017 22:16
by Mac
@Goldenaxe1
Can't really do a valuation without seeing them.
Try taking a pic at your camera, or scanner's lowest setting. File needs to be samll fo upload. Most of these notes are worth around 50 Euro each in they are average VF grade. A new note would be worth around twice that.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 16 Oct 2017 01:16
by Series B notes
Mac, in an auction on eBay, I bought a 1960 1 pound note for EUR 27. It is in quite good condition. Here is the link to the picture:
Link removed. Commercial links are not permitted. Take a screenshot of the note and post the picture. —The Governor

Think I got my money's worth?

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 16 Oct 2017 10:47
by Mac
Series B notes wrote:Think I got my money's worth?
I sell notes of that era in that grade for about 20 Euro.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 16 Oct 2017 11:49
by Series B notes
I'm sorry, I just cannot post pictures for some reason. Here goes the description again: 2 light central creases, some handling, I would say XF. Value in this grade is above 20 euros?

Edit:
Or actually, make that GVF instead of XF.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 16 Oct 2017 14:15
by Mac
Series B notes wrote:I'm sorry, I just cannot post pictures for some reason.
Here's your pic.
There is a 250k size limit on posting images.

GVF is about right for this, quite a nice example of a 1960 £1.
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Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 29 Oct 2017 01:48
by ThePloughman
1960 is a tough year to get in better than VF grade. I'd say you did ok on that one.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 31 Oct 2017 11:19
by Series B notes
Mac, would you say A/B/C series replacement notes in very low grades (i.e. VG and below) carry a premium?

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 01 Nov 2017 00:34
by Mac
Yes. There are lots of date collectors for these. How much of a premium would depend on how many notes of a particular date or type are available in UNC, or high grade.

Re: Banknote Valuations requests thread

Posted: 01 Nov 2017 21:19
by Series B notes
You said earlier that 10/-, 20, 50, and 100 pound Lady Lavery notes usually have a premium, even in very low grade? What about the most common date in Poor grade? Any premium there?