Terrific images and coins everyone. I have a few and perhaps one can be listed later.
Circulating coins can be great fun to look through for your collection. Once or twice a year I will buy a brick of Washington quarters from my...
The image makes it appear to be what is commonly termed a die chip and is more often found on Lincoln cents of the era, but also near the date.
It looks like it might be very pretty with delicate color.
Keep in mind that the mintmark is raised from the field in the Pratt designs whereas the remainder of the features are sunken from the field....
The number in parentheses is the number of proof coins struck for that issue that year.
Truly, you shouldn't be reading mixed messages about cleaning coins since in almost every instance it will result in a loss of investment. Of...
I believe it's an LM4. If you look at the address of the images as they are listed on the PCGS BST it will tell you the source and the source in...
It was struck in Philadelphia so it will have no mintmark. The coin is a highly buffed and polished EF/AU worth approximately melt.
What denomination is it clashed with, Larry? Looks like either a quarter or a half dollar.
Holy Smokes! Do you have details of the coin and ceritification number? Do you have images of the slab? This would be helpful to all of us.
This isn't meant as sarcasm, but why would you save them?
If you pay via PayPal and follow all of PayPal, USPS and ebay rules then it can be tough to get hosed on coins purchased off of ebay. Unless, of...
All coins should be evaluated individually, regardless of what a price guide might suggest. Also, it can be quite dangerous to bid in Heritage...
Write what you want Mad.Outcast since you aren't following science or logic and I refuse to continue to participate in a circular debate on the...
I would expect virtually no premium and that you could find them on ebay.
I'll be the wet blanket and tell you that I really don't like these two coins at $710 combined. The Lincoln might be AU58, but if it isn't it is...
A year or two ago PCGS introduced a service where any coin that would have otherwise been bagged is now slabbed by PCGS in a "Genuine" holder....
It appears to have a slight amount of corrosion on it and a pinkish color indicative of someone either washing it in soap or dipping it. There...
Trade dollars had been demonetized by the US government during the nineteenth century, but they were again monetized with the Coinage Act of 1965....
Separate names with a comma.