Unbranded
1 oz Silver Bar - Steamboat Willie (Antiqued)
1 oz Silver Bar - Steamboat Willie (Antiqued)
Couldn't load pickup availability
Shipping Information
Shipping Information
Shipping Information:
* Free Domestic Economy Shipping (1-15 business days) for Group ALX15, JPW15, Handling 1-3 Business Days
* Fee Domestic Standard Shipping (1-12 business days) or Group WMT15, COS15, AMZ15, Fee $12.75 USA, Free if Order Over $100.00 USD.
* Free International Standard (3 to 25 Business Days) for group ALX25.
* Free International Economy Extended (ALX35 Product (11 to 35 Business Days) for group ALX35.
* International Pacific Islands Shipping (15-45 business days) for group ALX25 & ALX35, Handling 1-3 Business Days, Fee $18 USD.
Processing: Orders are processed within 1-3 business days before shipment.
Need Help? For detailed shipping policy information, view our full shipping policy.
* ALX15: Economy Shipping from US to US: 1-3 Days in Handling, 3-15 Business Days in Transit, Averaging 5 Days.
* ALX25: Economy Shipping from US to US: 1-3 Days in Handling, 3-25 Business Days in Transit, Averaging 15 Days.
* ALX35: Economy Shipping from US to US: 1-3 Days in Handling, 11-35 Business Days in Transit, Averaging 25 Days.
Steamboat Willie enters the public domain! Commemorate one of the best known classic animated short films in history featuring a cartoon mouse with these .999 fine antiqued 1 oz silver bars.-
Bar Highlights:- Contains 1 oz of .999 fine silver.
- Each bar is beautifully antiqued and comes in a protective capsule.
- Obverse: Features a classic scene from the now-public domain, "Steamboat Willie."
- Reverse: Displays a wood plank pattern over which the metal weight and purity are shown followed by the name "Steamboat Willie" and the year of publication, "1928."
Build your silver holdings in a classic and historic design featuring an iconic moment in animation history. Add these antiqued 1 oz Silver Steamboat Willie bars to your cart today!
Steamboat Willie
Steamboat Willie is a 1928 black and white film featuring a cartoon mouse. The mouse serves as a deck hand whose job is to get livestock onto the steamboat. His girlfriend tries to catch a ride, but misses the boat. The mouse then has to use a hook to pick her up and bring her aboard. She then drops her sheet music for “Turkey in the Straw” as he lowers her onto the deck of the boat. A goat eats the sheet music and the pair turn the goat into a music player. The mouse uses pots, pans, barrels, a washboard, a cat, a pig and many other animals as instruments to accompany the music coming out of the goat. In the end, the captain of the ship does not approve of this goofing off and puts him to work peeling potatoes as punishment. This animated short, now in the public domain, helped to kick off the good fortunes of its creator, Walt Disney. - Bar
- Silver
Share
