Welcome. When I became more serious about coin collecting, my first mistake was to try to collect too many different series at once. That may work...
You Outta Use The Usual Bad Example
Sorry to be that guy, but its a fiddle, not a violin. :) From the US Mint website: "The fiddle represents the Appalachian music of east...
Does the movie theater care that they charge you 10 times market value for popped corn and sugar water?
Yea but if you remember several thousand were held by the mint for months after the "sell out"... They then went on sale, 1 per household, months...
I watch all the time. At least I get to see coins on TV. I like to calculate how over-priced each item is. And he often shows new releases. Just...
Not considered an error. It is damage. Someone altered the coin.
Yeah, they are all just altered cents. Either plated or dipped in some chemical. Not worth anything.
Worth approximately $15 to $20 in my humble opinion.
Bubbled Bye? Though some incorrectly say Bubble Bye.
It is a regular clad dime with heavy environmental damage.
I disagree. This policy is aimed at the big dealers who buy a ton of one product, hunt for the 70s, and return the rest. Over and over and over....
MS65 MS66 MS66 MS64
The coin you own is worth 5 cents. It is made of the same metal alloy then as now (75% copper/25% nickel).
Appears to be housed in some sort of jewelry bezel. And looks plated.
Look again.[ATTACH]
Sorry, but you are seeing it wrong. What Michael K posted is exactly the same as on lincolncentresource.com
One of my biggest regrets is when I left my college apartment, about 20 years ago, before I was a coin collector, I gave away my grandpas old blue...
The absence of a mint mark means that the 1974 Quarter was minted at the Philadelphia mint. Worth 25 cents. Anything else cool in the bag?
You're right, we shouldn't be rude to new posters, and give them a chance. But anyone who's been here even a short time knows that this place is...
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