What is this penny worth?

Discussion in 'What's it Worth' started by Mr. Numismatist, Nov 7, 2022.

  1. Mr. Numismatist

    Mr. Numismatist Strawberry Token Enthusiast

    Hi, I was wondering what this coin is worth? It doesn't have to be exact, just an estimate. Thanks. fake.jpg
     
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  3. derkerlegand

    derkerlegand Well-Known Member

  4. alurid

    alurid Well-Known Member

  5. Mr. Numismatist

    Mr. Numismatist Strawberry Token Enthusiast

    Yes I know it's altered. Just seeing if anyone else could detect it. :)
     
  6. SensibleSal66

    SensibleSal66 U.S Casual Collector / Error Collector

    Aye! Sneaky are you. :clown::shifty::hilarious:
     
    spirityoda likes this.
  7. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Guess this was done near the start of someone's learning curve for faking key dates. :rolleyes:
     
    SensibleSal66 likes this.
  8. Jeffjay

    Jeffjay Well-Known Member

    Its an attempt at what is a curse on a great hobby.
     
    spirityoda and SensibleSal66 like this.
  9. Collecting Nut

    Collecting Nut Borderline Hoarder

    Just look at the closeness of the numbers. The 19 and the 14 are the same distance but the 91 are further apart. It’s very noticeable.

    It damaged so I think $.02 is $.01 to high.
     
    Cazador, Kasia and SensibleSal66 like this.
  10. Razz

    Razz Critical Thinker

    Plus the 1 in 19 is much shorter than the 1 in 14 on the altered coin. On the real 1914 D the ones are exactly alike.
     
  11. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    Could be a learning example.
    Fun coin!
     
    SensibleSal66 likes this.
  12. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    Here are a couple of those altered 1944-D to 1914-D pieces that were done with a little more subtlety. The fact that the obverses were re-toned after the alterations on the first "4" sort of gives them away.

    The big give away for these fakes that are executed better is the space between the "9" and the fake "1".

    1944-D to 14-D One O.jpg

    1944-D to 14-D One R.jpg


    1944-D to 14-D Two O.jpg 1944-D to 14-D Two R.jpg

    Here is a well circulated example of the real thing. Note that the style of the digits in the date is different.

    1914-D Cent O.jpg 1914-D Cent R.jpg
     
  13. Oldhoopster

    Oldhoopster Member of the ANA since 1982

    If you know it was altered, why are you wasting peoples time by pretending to post a legit question? It is a rather obvious alteration at that.

    Members think your a new collector and are actually asking for help and trying to learn, not someone playing games. Not the best way to introduce yourself to the group, IMO
     
    Kasia likes this.
  14. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    I would not jump on him too hard. I have a sad story.

    I was manning a club table at a large show when I lady stopped by to find out what a coin she had was worth. It was a "1914-D cent." She had purchased it as a gift for her late husband and was looking to see what it was worth. Sadly, it was one of these altered 1944-D cents. It was hard to tell her that.
     
    Clawcoins likes this.
  15. manny9655

    manny9655 Well-Known Member

    Normally the other giveaway is that the genuine 1914-D has no VDB on Lincoln's shoulder, whereas an altered 1944-D MIGHT. I say "might" because it looks like the above examples may have been tooled to remove the initials. Or photoshopped.
     
    Abramthegreat likes this.
  16. johnmilton

    johnmilton Well-Known Member

    They are my photos, and I didn’t Photoshop them because I don’t know how. I could have fooled with them with my old Microsoft photo program, Photoshop Elements is hard to use and not does not give out its secrets easily.

    The VDB thing is something you can use, but something most people have to detect with a 10X or stronger glass.
     
    manny9655 likes this.
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