It's damage.
Is there a reference for this die state? I am unfamiliar with the reason it looks the way it does.
In that condition it worth melt value.
It's glue or a foreign substance.
You are doing fine. Stabilize your camera or phone and get it as close to the coin as possible while keeping focus, then take the photo. You won't...
Not my point, posting the pics as you are doing limits the ability's of the software. Only crop your Photos, do not magnify. Then click upload...
It looks like a loss of lamination. It is much easier to see an OP's photos when they use the upload file button. Then click full size.
And corrosion.
Prove it, Show us the email. Make sure that you redact your email address for security reasons and the rules.
This ploy of Heritage and Stacks looking at the coin, is being used to try and make the OP right and all us wrong. It never happened, even though...
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Definitely, we will do our best with the photos provided.
Unless it is a coin with high contrast between the devices and field. These tend to get good prices even if they don't make the PL status.
Gotcha, you came here with the answer, Heck why did you even ask the question right? Hang out,you might just learn something.
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I am leaving that assumption up to you. I have said my peace about this coin. It's nice with a gold bean on a 65 rattler.
It's worn, not sure though if it is a fake. Looks like someone's pocket piece.
I am at $1125.
You are the captain of your own ship, if you can't see for yourself what keeps this from being the grade posted. Then I don't know what to tell...
I'm sorry but anyone that wasn't trying to be correct could have looked at those examples of die caps and seen that they looked nothing like the...
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