Colonials and all 1C coins. :)
Being encased in something.
Looks ex-encased. Damage.
Dang it, I was just about to mention Godwin's Law! http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law
MD is much more common than a doubled die (especially from 1968-1972), and much less collected. I personally wouldn't pay a premium for it, but...
Mechanical doubling. Notice: 1) It is flat and shelf-like, as if part of the design was flattened. 2) Affects both the mintmark and the date in...
Edited...not worth the time
I don't have any music videos, and I don't plan on posting any in the near future, they aren't really something I'm interested in doing.
Because if you take away the doubling and compare it to a normal coin, the letters and design on yours looks thinner. I've seen a bunch of...
Those are class IV doubled dies that clearly "add" to the devices. Unfortunately, yours looks like the doubling cuts into the design and "takes...
Because it probably wasn't damaged by a coin roller specifically, it was probably hit by something else that only contacted the 4 in the date.
Sorry Tommy...I just see a damaged coin.
Looks like MD.
My suggestion is get a better soundtrack to the video.
And attempting to steer this topic back where it started, learning from the lack of a sale (in this case a half dollar that was listed on ebay for...
Wow, superb! Grade?
It's not distorted in the same way that is indicative of a class VI doubled die. All signs point to die deterioration doubling for this one my friend.
Too much stuff on the obverse around the cheek and below (or maybe that's just the photos)...if not details, I'd say AU.
300 wheats out of a single box is pretty impressive.
Or, for an example or two that's less circulated... http://coppercoins.com/lincoln/diestate.php?date=1943&die_id=1943p1do001&die_state=eds...
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