While it may take some time, the coronavirus will eventually run out of steam, and metals will too.
To me, it seems that having several unrelated roommates and smaller collectables such as coins and jewelry should be mutually exclusive.
This happens many more times than we'd like to know . . . I sold 2 coins that made monstrous leaps in value afterward. I can't cry over spilt...
Very nice MS63 1887-S Morgan Dollar here. Great luster & strike, and nice surfaces for the grade . . . $260 delivered. Pay by check or MO....
VF35 . . . no traces of luster in the protected areas, and a little light on detail in the eagle's leg and wingfeathers.
1853 Half Cent
1853 Gold Dollar . . . This is getting ridiculous . . . What a revealing perspective!
1853 Large cents . . . 1853 seems to be the most denomination-dominant year. See what I did there? I coined a new one . . . Whoops, did it again....
1853 A&R Half Dollar . . . imagine how shocked many would be who initially pulled such coins from circulation, believing they'd be rare.
1853 A&R Quarter
1865 Two Cent
1865 Nickel Three Cent
1853 Silver Three Cent
Haha, three of us hit that one all at once . . .
. . . and 1922 for Peace Dollars . . . how I cringe when I see common coins coming down the aisle.
In Half Dimes, I think I see the 1857 more than any other date.
I'll start with an easy one . . . $20 gold Lib - 1904
How about the most common by series?
Good originality, good luster, good strike, modest grazing of the surfaces, and few deep marks. Probably MS64, possibly only MS63.
Good luster, good strike overall with only a little localized weakness. Surfaces look just a tad busy below Liberty's eye, so I think MS64...
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