@Yankee42 - thank you for posting the Coronet cent. I got busy and forgot to post mine. [ATTACH]
Good on you, @geekpryde , for being our resident statistician! I like your lists. :) I started #05 (the 4WP thread), but the idea wasn't...
Looks OK to me. Just polished to within an inch of its life.
Wow! [IMG]
Wow!
Technically, that last one is a basilisk.
I like those really early ones and have my own private nickname for ‘em. I call ‘em “snakeheads”, for the serpentine eagle with the snaky,...
Since you're already in good hands with @Muhammad Niazi and I honestly know very little about Sasanian coins, I'll just share the lone example in...
Another nice one. Just for fun, I'll share the one from my "Holey Corkboard Collection". :) As has been said and agreed upon in another thread,...
Thank you!
I'm afraid that photo is way too distant, blurry, and out of focus for anyone to be able to say much about that coin.
Wow, great portrait on those last three! Venus is so much more attractive than Caesar himself was! :p
Giveaway Lot #260120-05 (LOT: 4 pieces) Two unusual World coins and two interesting Latin American tokens, 1600-1976 Item #1 of 4: India...
Giveaway Lot #260120-04 Greenland: 1926-HCN♥GJ copper-nickel 25-øre of Christian X [ATTACH] Numista-6960. Struck for Greenland at the Royal...
Giveaway Lot #260120-02 Canada (Nova Scotia): 1823 copper halfpenny token of George IV [ATTACH] Numista-4913. According to Numista regarding...
Giveaway Lot #260120-01 India (Vijayanagara Empire): ca. 1336-1646 gold bele (1/10 fanam) "World's Smallest Gold Coin", ICG certified [ATTACH]...
There ya go! Thanks. I knew there were diagnostics that can distinguish 1916 from 1917 Ty.1 quarters, even on dateless coins, but couldn’t...
Ah yes. Good to see that again. :)
Thanks. I’d heard the term “kettle token” but didn’t have the lowdown. Cool example posted.
Typo- you obviously meant 1917, not 1927.
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