Silver Dime Roll : Sterling Silver Gift
Silver Dime Roll
silver
- Provide (mirror glass) with a backing of a silver-colored material in order to make it reflective
- (esp. of the moon) Give a silvery appearance to
- coat with a layer of silver or a silver amalgam; "silver the necklace"
- made from or largely consisting of silver; "silver bracelets"
- Coat or plate with silver
- a soft white precious univalent metallic element having the highest electrical and thermal conductivity of any metal; occurs in argentite and in free form; used in coins and jewelry and tableware and photography
dime
- Used to refer to something small in size, area, or degree
- A small amount of money
- a United States coin worth one tenth of a dollar
- A ten-cent coin
- Dime (Tell me) is the third Spanish album released by Christian rock band Guardian. The album was released in 2001.
- dime bag: street name for a packet of illegal drugs that is sold for ten dollars
roll
- A cylindrical mass of something or a number of items arranged in a cylindrical shape
- a list of names; "his name was struck off the rolls"
- A cylinder formed by winding flexible material around a tube or by turning it over and over on itself without folding
- move by turning over or rotating; "The child rolled down the hill"; "turn over on your left side"
- An item of food that is made by wrapping a flat sheet of pastry, cake, meat, or fish around a sweet or savory filling
- axial rotation: rotary motion of an object around its own axis; "wheels in axial rotation"
silver dime roll - COIN STORAGE
COIN STORAGE TUBES, round clear plastic w/ screw on tops for DIMES (Quantity of 10 tubes)
Clear plastic coin tubes for U.S. Dimes - Each tube holds a standard roll of Dimes (without the wrapper) - Unbreakable plastic screw on cap - Air tight lock for permanent security - The round tubes are made of crystal clear polystyrene - Polystyrene is an inert plastic and safe when in contact with coins Dimensions - Diameter 3/4 - Height 2 5/8 Can also be used to hold other small items such as buttons, sewing supplies, hardware, fishing tackle, jewelry making supplies, beads, small cosmetic items, matches, and more.
81% (
7)
The Scream by any other name...
Nikon F80 + Nikkor 50mm f/1.8 + Fuji Velvia 50. I finally processed five rolls of Velvia 50, shot during a fabulous trip to New York with M in June 2007. That was the beginning of my journey with the Nikon F80, my 'first' film SLR, and the true workhorse of my stream even now. Oh yes, and the delay was because I wanted to process the Velvia as it was intended, in E6 chemicals as slide positives and by the time you get scans as well, that's expensive. So it took a while. I hope you enjoy the change of scenery and a break from the Burnham Lighthouse, the poppies and for a short period - cross processed film! ;)
Money, money, money!!
My cousin saved these and I inherited them 19 yrs ago. I sold them the day this picture was taken so I'd have money to go to Wisconsin to see my girlfriend. There were 11 silver dollars, two fifty cent pieces, about 20 quarters and a roll of dimes. I got $138. It will pay for my share of the gas etc. Please please don't tell me I got taken. I don't want to cry.
silver dime roll
The phone messages waiting for Henry Pierce clearly aren't for him: "Where is Lilly? This is her number. It's on the site." Pierce has just moved into a new apartment, and he's been "chasing the dime"--doing all it takes so his company comes out first with a scientific breakthrough worth millions. But he can't get the messages for Lilly out of his head. As Pierce tries to help a woman he has never met, he steps into a world of escorts, websites, sex, and secret passions. A world where his success and expertise mean nothing...and where he becomes the chief suspect in a murder case, trapped in the fight of his life.
Henry Pierce is about to become very rich--as soon as his firm, Amedeo Technologies, gets an infusion of capital from a big backer. But the brilliant chemist's workaholic habits are disrupted when his lover, the former intelligence officer of his company, breaks up with him. Lonely and dispirited, he moves into a new apartment and gets a new phone number that attracts a lot of callers, but not for him. His new telephone number seems to have previously belonged to one Lilly Quinlan, an escort whose Internet photo arouses Henry's curiosity, especially when L.A. Darlings, whose Web page features the beautiful young woman, can't tell Henry how to find her. With the same single-mindedness that made him a high-tech superstar, Pierce pursues his search for the missing girl, motivated by his guilt over the disappearance years earlier of his own sister, who, like Lilly, was also a prostitute (and ultimately the victim of the Dollmaker, a serial killer from Connelly's 1994 novel The Concrete Blonde.) But that motive is too thin to support Pierce's sudden abandonment of his career at such a critical juncture, even if forces unknown to him are setting him up for a fall. Despite those holes in the plot and a less than compelling protagonist, the novel succeeds due to Connelly's literary and expository gifts and his more interesting secondary characters. --Jane Adams