I dropped by my local B&M coin shop a few days ago and came across this very respectable 1909 VDB Lincoln, which makes coin 2 of my US type set. Well, I think it's respectable anyway - you Lincoln experts might find something wrong with it, but that's OK. For a few bucks, it's perfectly fine for my set.
Thanks Angelo. I know little of Lincolns, but the detail was crisp and the color and luster were attractive.
Most here know I dont care for wheatbacks due to being so darn common but thats a nice one. Mines about the same grade but brown.
Common is what I can afford. I thought of doing a full-blown US type set, which I could do, but I'd rather spend that money on ancients. For now, a 20th-century set will make me happy. I'll have to shell out a bundle of scratch for the Barbers and SLQ's as it is, since I want uncirculated coins.
Mines a type set that I completed in 2010 *minus gold* and ive been piecing it out little by little for big ancients. Just have trouble letting go two u.s. coins for 1 otho :/
That's an awesome pic. I try to photograph my wheat cents, but my setup always creates a problem where the rim of the coin looks too thick and I can't include the whole thing. Do you have a photo of your setup somewhere?
It's nothing fancy, Canon Coolpix, small copy stand, a few desk lamps. I set the white balance and exposure manually, switch to macro and click away. Editing in photoshop is minor - white balance tweaks, luminosity, contrast. I need to readjust my lighting techniques for moderns though. That pic came out OK, but I've got dozens of crappy ones, especially of silver. I'm so used to ancients with dark patinas that I'm really having a hard time lighting bright silver so that it comes out right.
I'm 10 coins away from a compete type set my 20th c portion is pure crap as it's the early stuff I love 3 are gonna be tough without them I could complete it within the year the small eagle and half will be tough as will the 93 liberty cap
Rev sure looks like a shadow of Lincoln may grade as a striking error ? But we know Tpg details cost also they could be a wasted cash unless still Red?
It's a trick of the lighting. The coin shows no evidence of a die clash in hand, and I would call it RB. I'll post this Jefferson as well - picked it up along with the Lincoln and finally got a photo I'm halfway pleased with. The inner right column is crooked. Is there some crooked column variety in these, or is it an indicator of die deterioration? - or something else?
John; I would post your question and the picture in the error forum. A lot of so called errors are actually caused by die deterioration. They would be a good source to judge the cause of the column lean, over there. I'm curious myself.
I just got the penny last night, but I've had the nickel for a couple of months (purchased from a fellow forum member). These are the only slabs in my collection. First, a MS 65 large date 1960 penny: And a PF 67 1958 proof nickel: