It was in use for a short time just over a decade ago.
I've been to the Whitman Philadelphia shows and also did this past ANA in Philadelphia, both at the Convention Center, and can tell you first-hand...
It's a proof coin. This is known as a mechanical error when the wrong grade, date, series or attribution is placed on the label.
This is the first that I have ever seen with a post-Mint tooling for "SHE COLT". The more common alteration, at least in my experience, is to...
It looks like it has been scrubbed pretty good.
Looks like a VG with surface issues on at least the obverse.
Small gold such as 1g pieces can have enormous premiums to spot built into them, which may seem rather small given the price, but when liquidated...
Many of the famous 20th century "key date" coins are actually quite common and readily available. Therefore, one can afford to be extremely picky...
Looks like a choice AU, but I am not completely thrilled with the eye appeal as long as I am interpreting the underlit images well enough.
I think you will need to get that certified as a micro-O by either PCGS or NGC in order to realize good money for the piece. As is now, I am not...
The only confirmed overlap with proof regular coinage of other denominations would be the 1916 Lincoln cent, 1916 Buffalo nickel and 1921/1922...
He might not have been using the "Proof" column to record proof coins.
The above is very true.
Buy what you like and/or understand. Ignore the rest.
The coin might have been boinked prior to your treatment of it and the treatment might have removed the old layer of manipulation.
This may sound silly, but that is actually a highly desirable PCGS holder. Not only is it an OGH (old green holder), but it is also of the...
They look like prints and you have already received excellent insight.
I have to disagree with the part in bold because there is no law that states that every ten year window will produce higher coin prices.
As a crossover or to crack out and send raw? If as a crossover, then I do not know if both NGC and PCGS accept ICG coins for that service.
Anyone can make good money in buying and selling the right coins. The only problem is that most folks either do not identify the right coins or...
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