Obverse of the first and reverse of the second. :p [IMG] [IMG]
The guy has had them for a while. The pictures are all juiced to the max. None are monster toners. The first one is the nicest of the group (in...
While your prices might not have gone up (at least for the cherry picked items), they certainly have here (for the majority of items). You are...
It has lost 50% on enough items. Bread, fruits, meat, cheeses are just some of the items that are as much as 2x what they were 10-12 years ago....
Environment plays a role (some are more conducive to toning while others will not cause much or any toning). And if you removed them early enough...
Not quite, especially if you look at the commonly purchased items. Food, clothing, and medicine cost more today than I was spending in 2009.
Here is a proof set on eBay that has somewhat similar color:...
I've seen it in the original US mint proof sets as well. It's possible that whatever caused the toning was already transferred to the coins from...
This is still the best MS 61 toned Morgan I've owned or seen (of course I have not seen all, so I'm sure there are better ones out there). It's a...
One I used to own: [IMG] [IMG]
Summary Chapter 1 Rd. 1: 1883-O Morgan NGC MS63* [Obv]...CT -> 3.6 (Mid) vs You -> 4 (Mid-High) Rd. 2: 1880 Morgan PCGS MS62 [Obv]...CT -> 2.7...
These are on my bucket list to acquire as I find them curiously interesting. I've wanted a graded set (yes NGC does grade them) but have been...
This has final numbers:...
@ZoidMeister the other series that has multiple metals (silver & niobium) and multiple colors is from Austria (the 2004 coin has a train):...
This is from the Space Series (Silver & tantalum)....handy (and underappreciated :p) thread below:...
It depends where you sell. A local coin store will probably pay around spot regardless if it is proof or bullion (maybe a little more for...
Spaceship! [IMG]
I agree with @Jaelus It is not hype; prooflike examples can often make a coin more eye appealing than a traditional business strike.
As far as building a set, I agree with @medoraman that the 1/10 oz is a little too small to appreciate. Plus those tend to have the highest...
It's doable but can get expensive. Some bullet points: ~The fractionals (1/10, 1/4, and 1/2) were only made from 1997 to 2008. ~For proof...
Separate names with a comma.