My initial reaction to your OP was "those pictures are too dark to tell anything" In your second, more well lit pictures, there are some...
Between the two, I'd pick the 1799. The large mark on the breast of the eagle on the 1800 is a major detractor. Both of them appear to have...
ANACS and ICG are highly variable. They are inconsistent at best. Sure, some of their coins coincidentally wind up accurately graded, but even a...
Impressive assortment. I'm looking for one for type, but they always elude me (the condition I want, prooflike, is very scarce).
I see nothing AT about that Franklin. It is quite attractive.
It maxes out at 63, I think. The haziness of the obverse surfaces is unattractive, and will bring the grade down.
I doubt it will sell out. It is an expensive coin, and there are a lot of them.
The time to make reservations was months ago. I'd be surprised if there were a lot of rooms left. Book them now! I will not be going to FUN this...
Photobucket has been sucking big time for a while now. It's not you, it's them.
Haha, clever. It was more of a general curiosity question, I'm not planning on searching any out right now.
I didn't realize ancient coins were that fragile? Why are they so brittle?
The reverse on that piece is absolutely incredible.
Hot damn. They're all nice, of course, but I'm drawn to the Alexander and Ptolemy pieces. That Ptolemy is astounding!
Holy geez, that is tiny! Are these rare? How much do they usually go for, if you don't mind me asking?
Very cool assembly of coins. Can you show us the reverses as well?
Of particular concern to collectors: I've heard rumors that this organization is financing their operations by selling collectibles, statues,...
The only time I got the wrong coin, it was an honest mistake by the seller. He had sold several coins at the same time and put the wrong ones in...
I can't see any circumstance where I would buy a broken coin. Ever. Are broken coins like this common? Why would a coin break? I understand the...
Nah, its just so nice we got to see it twice!
Dang, that coin is awesome! I've always wondered... why is gold noted as "AV" instead of the more chemically correct "Au"?
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