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thebeezkneez

November 06, 2009
Mere words cannot express how much I love this. I read the comments and now want to add my 2 cents worth (pun intended). A grid HAD to be used so Jamie gets my vote. And then an resin-epoxy-bartopper was put over the top. I don't think grout would work because of coin depth and cleanliness. If the coins were exposed to foot traffic they would be dingy looking not all bright & shiny.
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RIBS

November 06, 2009

I love this floor and found this site after seeing it mentioned on a site about redoing an apartment floor on the cheap.  I am going to TRY and use this on my own kitchen/butlers pantry and laundry room redo.  And then I can say "I re-did the floors for PENNIES!"  Ha ha ha......LOVE IT!  Anyone have ANY idea of what was used to glue the pennies down?  The grout in between?  Whoo whoo.....

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DestinybyDefinition

July 08, 2009

i think i can see a grid on the top one...

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Anonymous

July 08, 2009

The picture looks as though the pennies are laid in some kind of tar.  We had an old house in Houston with screeds "glued" down to a concrete slab with hot tar.  I wonder if that's how these were attached.  It would certainly be cost effective and permanent, but I'm not sure about the cleanliness.  Maybe if the floor was covered in some kind of clear sealant after placing the pennies and letting the tar harden??

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Mike P

July 06, 2009

As to the legality of using coins as "art"...

It's a bit of a grey area. 

The penny mashers interpretation of the law is, that since the coins are being removed from circulation, then it is legal, as the law only applies to coins in circulation.  If you tried to buy candy with your mashed penny, then by this interpretation, it is then illegal, but I suspect most people don't try to put a mashed penny back into cirulation.  I guess the question is who has the legal authority to remove coins from circulation?

Another interpretation is defacing coins for fraudulent use.  Since there is no intent to defraud anyone with these coinc, it is legal.

Either way, I believe the government just turns a blind eye.

 

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DIY Maven

July 03, 2009

Mike--about 2 minutes before I read your comment, my hubby asked the exact same question! I guess you could make the argument that that they didn't actually deface it. Worse are those penny flattening machines, when you think about it. You know the ones...the souvenir makers they have at every national park in the U.S.! ;)

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Rene Rencontre

July 03, 2009

Wow it looks great seriously. Now I see what I can make with my collections of coins. :)

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MarvinWindows

July 02, 2009

That looks awesome, but isn't some sort of crime to deface money -- or remove it from circulation -- like this?

 

--Mike

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jamievogel

July 02, 2009

Hmmm. I'm intrigued. I now want to penny-tile my entire house. Can you imagine how hard it would be to get all the coins spaced correctly??

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DIY Maven

July 02, 2009

The lines in pennies are so fine, grout probably wouldn't stick in them--I can't imagine even sand-less grout would get stuck. Although, because all those grout lines between the pennies are so shallow, I'm not sure regular grout (sanded or otherwise) would stand up. Being that thin, I'd think it would fracture, especially under such usage. Maybe they were set into an epoxy which was pre-applied to the sheets and then the sheets applied with thin set, or whatever. It certainly would be interesting to hear how it was actually done!

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