Your head would look funky, too, if you washed your face with a bench grinder.
Scotch-Brite victim. Worth melt.
If it's uncirculated, you did OK. No idea if it's common or rare, but there's not enough demand for it to matter.
VAM 2BJ2. The obverse field gouge and reverse collar clash are both present.
They do look to be all the same die pair (I'm going with VAM 21A), which means they were not likely dispersed into circulation (i.e., they're...
The 88-O Morgan is an oval O, VAM 17. The grade looks to be FR2, but as such is would be a pop. 1, none lower at PCGS (two are currently graded...
I think I'm going to start calling Indian Cents "Oakies" instead.
Here are some cents I pulled from an old Whitman folder. I've probably posted them here before, but bits are cheap, so here they are again. The...
Seems Fine-ish. Neat coin!
That has little to do with an actual Morgan dollar. Several years ago, Whitman released a book authored by Karen Lee that was mostly Morgan's...
VAMs 5 and 32 are the toughest, 6 is probably the easiest. Any in AU and higher are tough, and pop tops of any of them are 5-figure cons.
Well, you'll be smelling more weed, anyway.
I think the premium (if any) will be gone by the time your coins are back from grading. You'll have to submit under show grading, which I'm...
AU58.
43-S. 4 and S are partially grease-filled.
The answer to the question being asked really depends on what you're looking for. I don't entirely buy the premise that the expensive table means...
Not entirely true. You may be able to move it off the field with static electricity if you're patient enough.
I don't know that I'd say the second is better, just different. It looks like the exposure changed a bit, and that you have fewer burned out...
If you're a YN, it's quite easy to get a scholarship to the Summer Seminar.
It doesn't look as distinct as the gouge on VAM 1E or VAM 1K. This is a popular place for a vertical scrape mark on the die. The obverse die for...
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