24-S is a good coin. However, besides the cleaning scratches, you can see in the normal lighting photos, the coin looks clean, but there's no...
68 is very high, lets see them. Prob 63's.
Offset transfer errors are not ink smears. They are very attractive.
I saw a 48 that was altered to be a 1943 almost 50 years ago. As for the copper 1943, even the most recent one that was "discovered" was held in a...
There's no way to tell if what they are saying is true. It is most likely a lie, as they would not have paid you if they thought the items were...
Valuable ink smears errors have a very LARGE smear. The serial number will often be light or dark or slightly drippy. Here are some in smear...
It probably came out of a plated set that was hawked as collectible and valuable. And when the people took it to a coin shop to sell it (more than...
The quarter has been spooned. Look in the search box here, there are several threads on that, and it shows you how to do it.
You can see where the plating has worn off in a few areas. A steel cent was plated over.
Barber made some pretty androgynous looking Liberty's. Something is missing, but not too much. Wait for an expert. [ATTACH]
It's a common date but worth up to $10 retail if it's uncleaned XF.
1804 large cent, that's a very good coin. At least a semi key IMO.
Quarters weigh 5.67 and while 5.9 is a tad heavy, it's not really a big deal, since it is still in spec at the upper end of the tolerance range,...
I don't see how it could possibly be worth the money to get it graded.
They plated these and sold them on the cable selling coin show. I have a couple that were plated in gold that I found. Looks better in hand. The...
Is one of the tails silver and one clad? Even though this coin is "fake" it's still worth more than a quarter. I don't know what the value is...
A mylar or other type of plastic currency sleeve to protect it.
That one is good. That's a good serial. The best ones are 8 solid numbers, complete ladder up or down, and super low notes (under 100). Super high...
The 6 2's is close. But you need 7 or 8. Unless the 6's are arranged at certain points where you can read the same number back and forth, and...
Take a look at Wexler's 1976-D doubled die photos and compare. https://www.doubleddie.com/1829488.html
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