So very nice! You must've put quite a bit of effort into acquiring them.
Sadly zinc just loves to be oxidized...
In the snow! Snowing is an important part of that. Or rain. :smuggrin:
A pain in the butt to find in Super Mario Galaxy 2. (I hope someone appreciates this reference!)
I'm not an eBay seller, but if I was I wouldn't think I'd be too perturbed if someone won an auction and took 2 or 3 days to pay. People are busy...
Another thing with the SLQs: don't be quick to nic-a-date the Type 1's since they might be 1916's. There are diagnostics to tell if it's 1916 so...
Looks like you can buy some proof like MS68 quarters from them for $1800... Or you could buy PF68 quarters somewhere else for probably $10.... Hmm...
That is cool! It's nice they are trying to be historically accurate. I remember watching a fairly new show set in the old west and people were...
Make sure he knows not to clean them! It would be sad if such a nice coin got killed by a cleaning.
Wow! I'd almost be too scared to handle it raw.
Reminds me of how the ten or so 1933 $20s still tied up in litigation just magically appeared in a safe deposit box.
MS66! So pretty.
Slabbed MS70 with the first day of issue insert.
That must've been a memorable experience to handle that dollar! That's the $10,000,000 one, right?
Me too. There's definitely quite a few people here who know a lot about large cents.
For the 1802, I'd say S-228, the 1/000 variety based on the placement of the "D" in "United":...
Was it a large cent in AU? This sounds familiar...
What grade is it? AG03? Well worn coins are awesome.
Or try to shoehorn it into the end of a wheat cent roll and join the ranks of sellers offering "original wrapped rolls*" that just happen to have...
Math is power!
Separate names with a comma.