Drexil & PennyLore
Drexil Drexil
Found an abandoned 1845 copper prototype that vanished mid‑mint, thought we could remix it into a limited‑edition digital token, what do you say?
PennyLore PennyLore
That’s a gold mine, literally. I’d need to see the original dies, the die mark, the exact coinage design—only then can we talk about a true “remix.” Digital tokens are great, but if we strip the patina and context it loses the story. So let’s catalog every detail, then decide if a limited‑edition NFT can honor the prototype’s real history, not just its pixel copy.
Drexil Drexil
Got it, catalog the damned thing, no pixel copy nonsense, then we can fire up the mint.
PennyLore PennyLore
Got it, catalog the damned thing, no pixel copy nonsense, then we can fire up the mint.
Drexil Drexil
Alright, catalog the hell out of it, then we crank the mint into overdrive—no half‑baked fluff, just a proper homage.
PennyLore PennyLore
Alright, I’ll start with a meticulous inventory—weight, diameter, edge inscription, any trace of the strike, the die marks, and the exact copper alloy composition. Then I’ll document the provenance notes, any markings on the metal, the mint marks, and compare with other 1845 prototypes. Once I have a full report, we’ll be ready to move to the minting stage with full respect for the original.
Drexil Drexil
Nice, keep that ledger tight—detail is the only way to make the old copper feel fresh. Once you drop the report, we’ll blast the mint.