About this big [ATTACH]
Show me a problem-free coin, I will call it problem-free. Show me a problem coin, I will call it damaged. Quoting a dealer I met when I was...
That is a fascinating coin. I have done that many times when writing essays.
After some wheeling and dealing, I got my lifetime tet for FREE! :)
I really need to expand into these other eastern cultures. They beckon strongly. There seems to be a practice of issuing a new coin at an...
AU details, cleaned
I was being very sarcastic. IMO, they are PMD hairlines, which renders a details grade to the OP coin.
I guess in this case you buy the slab and not the coin.
Could also be the pictures accentuating the hits. I would not buy from pictures like those.
RIP
I actually agree with the grade on that one. The obverse field is pretty chewed up.
Not to burst your bubble, but PCGS has examples all the way up to MS-68. Nowhere near a top pop. I have a Barber quarter that is just as nice,...
You're not going to like this......
The coin in the first two photos does not match the last photo....
Are you sure it is obverse 3? I concur that the date position does not match any of the 1795's married to the C reverse.
My favorite example of this. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
More-accurate pictures. The weird color around the devices is residual luster, not dirt. Sometimes lustrous areas can cause color to pop out even...
Here is my seated dollar. It is completely original, but is has a slightly more-distracting problem. ;) Your coin is far superior to mine. :)...
I recognize that reverse anywhere. It's either S-76a, S-76b, or NC-2. I see you are hoping for the latter. Looking at the spacing of the date, I...
This. Very common on pre-1800 silver and gold.
Separate names with a comma.