But is there anyone else out there that likes and or collects these?


When we first began making byrds, we were promoting their ancestry of dinosaurs with feathers and teeth. The pin was based on a dino with feathers and teeth.
I don't mind at all. I love showing these off. It is hard to find clear photos of a lot of the pins online or so I found. It isn't enough to carry and use a great knife or even collect them. I also love collecting things like the pins.KnickKnackCity wrote: ↑Wed Sep 19, 2018 7:23 amThanks Sal. Very cool and unique marketing concept.
Mini2white, would you mind posting a close up pic of the Byrd dino pin? It was fun last night digging into the forum history on these, but I couldn't get a clear image of this one specifically. Fingers crossed your gold bug finds you soon!

KnickKnackCity wrote: ↑Wed Sep 19, 2018 3:11 pmThanks for the great shot M2w. I'm pretty sure I speak for everyone when I say that you would be a welcome curator for the :spyder: pins. It would be great to have close up shots of every pin, information on them (model/variant sku, date released, event(s) they were given out at, production info, anything really) and a shot with their full-sized counterpart for comparison. Not to task you too much, but I have a feeling you wouldn't mind :D Like I said it was fun tracking down what I could, but as you noted, there is a ton of missing in-depth documentation on these. It would be great to have it all in one place for future refrence (SpydiePinWiki if you will.)

Those look great! I assume they are legal in every state?Paul Ardbeg wrote: ↑Thu Sep 11, 2025 5:22 amFound these pins up for sale online and received them today. Very nice quality and detail!
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