Yes! IF I decided to SELL it. But the starting bids in a big Auction House will be a Minimum of Ten Million US Dollar. But this time I am not to do that..So many high end buyer good offer has been declined easily.I am very sorry to hurts their feelings ( not to win on my lot) like Best first offer 20k then 2nd offer 50k then hird offer 100K then they can not offer anymore.All they have to do Find another doubled denomination that more cheaper than what I have. So from 100 K to Seven Million US dollars has been recorded in my eBay history of my Lots on 1995 Penny On Dime, meaning Accugrade Holder still trusted by big name high end buyer but did not satisfied me to gave up my 11c. that is all I can say. Anyway I love my monet Lisa 11c it will be the center piece of my collections. Cheers! :hail:
I miss all my Indians, those were probably my favorite coins that I have ever owned. I don't regret selling them, but I wish I still had at least one. Oh well, I imagine I will pick up more in the future. I'm embarrassed by these images as I know I could do better now. Out of the coins I own now, I'd have to say my Sower collection. I took pictures of these a long time ago so please excuse the poor image quality. (Excluding the first image of course, taken by Todd Pollock) I'll work on getting better pictures when I have the time.
I love the sower design, one of my favorites. I also love the incuse indians, want just 1 example myself but those pesky ancient romans invade my wallet and make sure no indians will invade their turf!
Every time this coin comes up, it trashes someones thread. That's just wrong. If redwin will not stop posting it, we must stop bringing it back into the thread. It's that easy. Don't reply about the coin.
I was wondering if you could make overlays for those. They are impressive, but if I had an overlay I could understand it better. That could be cool just to look at.
I bought these a couple months ago because I remembered your original post depicting your "Sowers". I was thinking that you might appreciate these three coins. They are 1/ F, 1 F, and 2 F.