It's like a landscape on some strange planet, with walls of a canyon and a bunch of moons in the sky. Who knew a wheat back could be so scenic - love it!
Your 1909 Cents are fantastic ikeigwin. You've got some gorgeous coins there! Do you photograph them yourself? The photographs are exquisite and so finely detailed!
I'll answer for Lance....yes, he is the alpha coin photographer! He's also one of the top Lincoln collectors in the world.
1950 Proof Lincoln. PCGS PR64RB. (Possible Hybrid Satin?) Unusual rainbow color on the obverse of this coin and I was always struck by the "graininess" of the surfaces -- it just doesn't look like the typical Proof. It almost looks sandblasted. In any case, PCGS still graded this PR64RB, so they hardly blinked twice at the finish. In the "Guidebook of Lincoln Cents" by David Bowers, he writes about the 1950 Proofs: "Earlier proofs of the year (1950) have a hybrid finish that is mirrorlike but with some satiny graininess". This is listed in the subsection "The Year 1950" on page 210. PCGS might not attribute, but other numistmatists have noticed this single year oddity. I am not saying that my 1950 Proof Lincoln is a hybrid-satin ... but it's interesting that it does show at least a little bit of satiny graininess that Bower's wrote about. So perhaps this was an early die-state Proof. A numismatist on Collectors Universe posted this about the 1950 Hybrid-Satin Proof: "There really were no "official" Satin Proofs struck in 1950; and it certainly was not intended. The coins which have that Satin appearance (and they can be found in all the denominations of 1950 Proofs) are apparently the result of inexperience of U.S. Mint workers in Proof blank preparation and striking techniques since 8 years had elapsed since the last Proofs were issued (in 1942). That coupled with over-use of dies resulted in Proof coins which lacked the true brilliance and mirror of a Proof as typically intended. To my knowledge coins with that finish can be found for 1950 along with scattered examples for 1951 and 1952 by which time the workers had evidently figured things out and got things looking more consistent."