I am considering a purchase of one or more of these coins, however they look to perfect to me, so the thought has crept in that they may be fake... what opinions are there when each of you look at these coins? The seller has 1100 feedbacks all positive 100% however this is an ebay sale which always makes me take stock, but of course are returnable... Steven
Suggest you check Forvm's Notorious Fake Sellers list. The Antony looks like a bad cast fake. Which makes the other two pieces very suspicious.
WATCH OUT! This seller is on the crook list... https://www.forumancientcoins.com/board/index.php?topic=18502.0
The corinth and the abdera have the wrong style and are most probably bulgarian imitations. have a look at an original corinthian stater of these dies here https://www.acsearch.info/image.html?id=1027777
I agree the Mark Anthony looks bad. If one coin looks bad, I'm not doing business. Kudos to Forvm for keeping a list like that. Very helpful. Once upon a time, I was a member of the Coin Forgery Discussion List (still get their emails), and was about brainwashed by Alan van Arsdale to trust no one. It still sticks. I'm no big fan of buying on ebay, and especially not high end coins.
Very bad fake hopefully even I can see it so not dangerous fakes , black list this seller. I don’t trust EBay sellers.
In general, I agree. But there are sellers on Ebay I trust and have been doing business with them for a long time. There are sellers on Ebay that are members here on CT as well as being listed on Vcoins. Like someone said, do your homework. You will save yourself at lot of heartache.
I should say that when I will feel ready in term of knowledge I will buy to some EBay trusted , Vcoins ... I feel to newbie for that even if for bad cast fakes I begin to detect them on photos. I carryon to do my homework, reading , watching many photos and going to dealers to feel in real some specific coins and buying some from them. A reputable expert tell me : first buy at the best prices to reputable dealers that offer guarantee as the worst is to buy a fake. After some years or less you will be able to be more secure buying on internet.
I agree with all others. I have not spent the time to identify each coin why, but my eye instantly told me all three are fakes. I know the wings on the pegasus are wrong. Best way to tell fakes? Spend 20 years or more staring at good coins. When you look at Ebay your eyes simply hurt. My eyes always tell me first when something is wrong, then I study it to identify what specifically my eyes objected to.
I'd agree that these are far too suspicious to buy on eBay... That being said, I buy most of my ancients on eBay and, after looking at thousands of auctions, I still maintain that the majority of coins listed for sale are genuine... especially if you buy lower grade stuff like I do. That being said, the OP coins are a perfect example of the common eBay fake - flashy surfaces, great centering, very little wear, and popular types. Add somewhat granular surfaces and questionable style points (as noted by others in this post), these would be good to avoid.
I have some sellers I buy from as well. However, the bigger point is Ebay is NOT for beginners, but more advanced collectors. You can get good coins and deals, but intermediate or advanced collectors should shop there, not newer collectors.
When I was purchasing ancients off eBay back about 10 years or so, I always had an understanding w/ the seller that I intended to send the coin to David Sear for a COA. If the seller had any qualms over allowing a return if needed, I refused to buy from that dealer. Perhaps selling has changed in the last 10 years, but the COA has not. All of my Ancient Greek coins have a David Sear COA, thus making any future sale (& my piece of mind) much more possible. I agree that a Sear COA in not a 100% infallible, but IMO it's darn near it. J.T.
I love the LIST, great piece of reference info for buyers! Thank you all for your comments, sounds like it was unanimous in running away from buying any of these coins, they did look just to good to be true, and generally always are... By the way, I have used the same return request, if an ancient is declared not genuine by the NGC, the seller must guarantee a refund at any future date!