If it's junk silver, why bother? Leave those poor coins alone! In 100 years from now some collector may actually appreciate the coin for what it...
That's a great way to completely ruin anything that's left of a coin. :(
The coin was simply coated with an organic, sulfur based material. It was definately NOT toning, just nasty gunk.
SWEET! Nice, nice coin....I love the tinges of red. :)
67 obverse, nice halo luster.
Thanks Dick! NGC is a coin toss between 66 and 67 everytime.
Nice coin!
PCGS, you can google it and find all the info.
Hardly a hit on that, comes down to luster under the brown.....nice coin. I like the reverse, pretty early die state, crisp motto for the issue.
First off....why do you want to have them graded?
I would have to say my hero Steward Blay with his highest graded wheat cent >>> 1919 MS-69RD. There's only ONE in the world, it can't get any...
When the coins are in airtites, a 2x2, binder stored in a ziplock, then into tupperware and stored in a controlled evironment..... PVC should not...
$15 coin in a slab.....I would have cracked it out within 2 minutes of getting it. LOL
Put the airtites into 2x2's, that's what I do to hold them in the pages....works great.
Here's a 1962 toned proof set my grandfather ordered from the mint and stored....and then gave to me. The Lincoln is beautifully toned just on the...
The case with coins....one higher grade is better than two lower IMO.
I would be VERY surprized if you have any 67 red coins in there. They are pretty scarce at that grade. I agree with Lance.
Old ANACS slab, that coin has just a trace of wear and every grader knows the story of the 20's branch mints....it would reslab higher today IMO.
Either a grease filled die (not worth much) or damaged. No way to tell without pictures.
Nice finds, not worth a lot but there's no way I'd put those into a coin star. Work on a roll!
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