You may get the green bean on this one.
Billions were made of this date so extremely common. Notice the rim is narrow on one side and wider on the other. This is known as a Misaligned...
Take a photo and crop it. It’s a 1935-D Lincoln Wheat ER Cent. It’s worn and it’s been clean. Despite its age, it’s a common date that’s worth...
I didn’t notice the LHB. I only noticed the sideways X.
To me the scratches are acceptable as the counter-stamp has already ruined any collectible value. All that matters is the counter-stamp and it’s a...
I know but I wanted both coins with the same counter-stamp because of the dates and denominations.
Autocorrect my friend, autocorrect
It’s been in a Vice with the other coin.
I just have way to many to post them.
I have no idea. Where did you get this from?
I’m not up on this type of coin but is this 1835 Large Cent with the Head of 1836?
Here’s 2 of my newest counter-stamped coins, both by the same merchant. G.G. Wilkins had a tight round stamp and while the coins are stamped he...
Thanks Mike.
It was all I had to get a half way decent photo.
Due to the size of the strike on the left I wouldn’t call that a saddle strike.
Right, no problem. Lol The weight should give it away but I don’t do foreign .
No joke folks. It’s not graded but probably should be. An easy to see triple strike 1994 cent. Nice that it has the date. [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
A 1985 Cent struck on a foreign Planchet. Graded by NGC as a MS-62 Red and weighing 1.66 grams. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
It’s not rare, it’s normal. Welcome to CT.
There are companies that use stretch wrap to roll coins. Edited to correct spelling
Separate names with a comma.