This fake (and risqué) Coca-Cola belt buckle has been around since at least the 1970s. We’re bringing it up now because a reader sent us these photos after finding the buckle in her husband’s “childhood memories box.” She goes on to describe the buckle: “On the front is a nun with her rosary. When you pull the top part up, the nun becomes a seductive young woman with her breasts exposed. The back is inscribed, ‘A Coca-Cola Creation, Trans-Pan Exposition, San Francisco, 1915.’ It did make me giggle.”

The buckle has nothing to do with the 1915 San Francisco World’s Fair, officially named the “Panama-Pacific International Exposition.” And Coca-Cola didn’t make it or authorize it. It’s an out-and-out fabrication. Allan Petretti, the author of well-known books on Coke collectibles, calls this buckle “the famous Nude Nun.” His harsh judgment is that it’s tasteless and worthless. You can still giggle at it, though.