There will be more in their zoological taxonomy, I'm sure. If they keep producing proofs in high quality design and strike (Clays) that everyone...
ASEs are legal tender. This is a "silver round," as well as the "Clay" medals.
Yep. The Korean Mint is producing lots of precious-metal medallions nowadays.
I kinda suspected, but wasn't sure. That's a bummer: I was hoping I won because I had better reflexes than the other bidder, who had the worst...
I'm sure that I won auctions over people using "sniping programs" when I had "sniped" coins that I really wanted using my max bid in the last few...
I feel ya. At my local coin club, if I'm not talking to them about U.S. coins, all I get is a glazed stare.
Hey, I bought a South Korean proof from Arrowtokyo!
This is the CORRECT ANSWER.
Ah, that's not a South Korean coin. That sounds like a Taiwanese 1-Yuan coin. [ATTACH] Does it look like this?
The 100-Hwan (top image) had a mintage at the Philadelphia Mint of 50 million pieces and was minted in 1959 and 1960 there, although the date uses...
My theory is this: The people operating the presses at the Chosun Mints (and later "Tae Han Empire" post 1897) simply had different hubs and dies...
I know little about these early struck pieces. I'm into South Korean coins (1959-present). Primal Trek has information (below) that is...
Yes, I've noticed. However, the mintages cited clearly indicate "Coinage in 1973" and the Mint Director's foreign mintage numbers for South Korea...
Thanks to you (@AmishJedi and @-jeffB ) I just found information today in the Korea listings in these Annual Reports that I hadn't noticed before;...
Operative word: "something..." But not YOUR order! Ha...
All I know is that coin dealers have dealt with very slow responses from Dansco even before the pandemic. They were often YEARS behind in...
I found it! Yes, it was at the link you provided! Thank you guys! @AmishJedi and @-jeffB [ATTACH]
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