New York Transit Token Misstrike Collection

We all know that certain someone who might be described as being "a little off."  Over the years we have culled out extra special NY subway tokens that came out of the stamping process imperfectly for the transit system but perfectly in the eyes of collectors.  Note the misaligned Y punch out at the center.  This slim & sturdy black leather money clip wallet features an authentic quarter-sized (7/8" diameter) Y-cut New York transit token circulated from 1970-79 or a 5 Borough 90's error Pentagon token.

Sale price$135.00
In stock

Product Details

 

This money clip wallet is top quality pebble grain cow leather in black.  Slim and light-weight with 2 card slots on back and inner pocket. Magnetic money clip on front. A metal plate is sewn into the wallet to protect magnetic cards. Officially licensed by the MTA, each wallet comes gift-boxed with a Certificate of Authenticity.

 

Leather Money Clip Wallet: 3" x 3-7/8"

Authenticity

 

Officially licensed by the New York MTA. For close to 25 years now, the NYCTA, now known as the MTA, provided Tokens & Icons with thousands of transit tokens directly from its depository. Receipts and documents for each purchase of tokens are kept on file at Tokens & Icons' headquarters.  Tokens has also worked with subway maps, marble from the floor at Grand Central Station and even collaborated on a mini Metrocard for use as an accessory.  All items created have gone through a stringent approval process by the MTA.  Given this longstanding relationship, you can be 100% confident with the authenticity of your purchase.

 

 

This money clip is durably constructed to provide you years of trouble-free service. 

If you own one of our US Coin or Token wallets and the leather body has worn out, take advantage of a Wallet Body Only purchase

 

How Tokens & Icons Came to Be

Tokens & Icons was founded in 1991 when Ward Wallau was approved for a license with the New York City Transit Authority (NYCTA). This occurred eleven years after he first approached them in 1980 when they filled in the "Y" of the quarter-sized "Y-cut" subway token.

After collecting a hundred of the "Y-cut" tokens, Ward thought they might be a logical way to reincorporate the tokens into New York's daily life and celebrate them as an icon of the city's rich transit history. With his first fifty pairs of authentic New York Subway Tokens, he received positive feedback and thus began his decade-plus endeavor to secure a license.

During the eleven years, Ward had intermittent contact with the NYCTA, and finally secured permissions from the NYCTA and the authentic tokens. He and Bulova Watch were the charter licenses. Bulova chose to replicate the tokens, yet Tokens & Coins (the original name of Tokens & Icons) was able to embark with the long sought after "authentic" token.

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