Ejection doubling.
The '53 has some damage on her right shoulder. I would wait for a nicer example. Not rare in that grade.
Polished. Can see the pock marks on the reverse.
Not AT, just the way it was stored. Still desirable as is - original. Obv toning a plus, reverse a negative. The obverse is the money side.
No, Wyoming wanted it that way. That is Bronco Billy. It is the silhouette found on license plates and the University of Wyoming's football helmets.
$2 - retail.
A wheatback cent with a filled die. Worth about 2 cents in that condition.
For $30? You think you are going to get over 1 oz. of gold on eBay for $30.
I don't buy collector gold without seeing it. Not all AUs are the same. Some have lots of hairlines, others have been cleaned, etc.
Weight andadensity wouldwbe the telling factor. Looks like a picture of a real set, then non-proof gold-plated fakes in the later pics. If the...
Just a die made from a work hub that made all of the lettering get pushed closer to the rim and mushed together.
VF30
You can still find valuable Morgan Dollars in the $100 range if you know what you're looking for. Every series has bargains if you put forth the...
I once owned a foreign coin that had been owned by King Farouk. It was purchased in his auction. A friend sold it to me for $10. It was cool, but...
SHE?
The problem with these sets, aside from the unattractive toning on one side, are the hairlines from the coins sliding around on the plush velour.
Lincoln wasn't Finnish. But the coin has a unique finish.
Nice attractive pieces. I collect the same way. If it is attractive and I keep thinking about it, it will go home with me if the price is reasonable.
What happens if you find out they're not real? What's your recourse then?
I have found UK 50p and pound coins, Canadian $1 and $2 coins and German 5 marks in junk bins. All still legal tender, and can be spent on vacation.
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