So on a good day they were worth $100 and they were selling it for $200. That is pretty much the standard markup over retail on all the TV coin...
Actually they do (or at least they did back when they were using vertical strike presses) the blanks are lightly misted with oil to aid their...
And the weight reduction from the chemical corrosion is probably the reason why the machine rejected it.
Florins were demonetized July 1 1993.
Not the result of a mint process (unless you consider a mint employee sneezing to be a process) See my post immediately above yours.
Yes he did well, around 7% per annum. That identifies the variety that the Confederacy struck using the same die as the Confederate half dollar....
If it was it would have to have been an assistant engraver. Robert Scott was engraver in 1817 and William Kneass was engraver in 1832.
Would I buy it? Yes. But at a price I could afford and that is too high for me.
Corrosion around spots of organic matter sittng on the coin. The decay products from the organic matter create circular regions around the...
Strikethrough is minor so ne increase for the error, and since most collectors would rather it not have the flaw the value is actually probably...
Good question. Quite likely at some point the battery will break down and begin to corrode damag the coin unless there is a way to remove it.
Abd there was a coinsomethig likr 10 years ago with a car on it whose headlights lit up. so coins that light up is nothing new.
Not for a dog show, but there was a "scratch and sniff" marijuana leaf.
Bingo, a "soft die" fake. It isn't the only copper 43 over some other date in Spadone.
And of course do the same for each state (in correct proportional size) so that when you have all of them you can lay them out into a complete map...
Looks like a Chinese fake of a generic silver round.
That is damage.
Reread section D. If you are buying them from someone that is making them with the intent that they get put into commerce, even if you have no...
I have seen a similar plaque that was done by Brenner, but I can't say if this is one or not, but I would suspect it is a copy of it.
According to Michael Lantz, Chief Die Setter at the Denver mint during that time, the mint did not produce silver and clad coins at the same time...
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