Yes it is clearly damaged. You can see how the metal was moved.
This one is a known doubled die. @Sheila Ruley knows what she is doing.
Knocking them out of the park lately, eh?
Really @Rick Stachowski ? With all those medicinal tomatoes you are growing, I would've figured you as a shoe-in for Tommy Chong in a look-alike...
I saw it on yootoob so it must be troo
Obviously it should read "double dye printing".
That is a classic case of machine doubling. Worth 1 cent.
Eh, The teller I talked to (who had the exact same name as me!) said that they get halves in their weekly orders. Seems that all the banks around...
I am peanut butter and jealous! That is my holy grail of coins. I don't care what else I find, that's the one I've been looking for since 2013.
Whelp, 4 skunk boxes of halves and 500 skunk dollar bills. Oh well. I will dump some at lunch and see if I can pick something else up.
Congrats. I've only found a few in all of my searches.
Nope. Not unless I could see it in hand :) I see what look to be scratches on her face also. Not sure if that is circulation wear or from a rough...
That ding on the reverse above the "T" in STATES is kinda nasty too.
Stopped by a different bank outside of my normal search radius today at lunch. Figured I'd pick up some dollar bills and quarters. Asked for $500...
Looks like that it coud've been plated at some point
That's a smart idea. I have my coins all labeled on their flips. Hopefully that will help my family when I shuffle off this mortal coil. I never...
I see that quite regularly in that spot for some reason.
I don't see any evidence of Blakesly Effect. My guess would be damage considering all the rest of the scratches etc on the coin.
Wow, those are great!
It is a 1972p DDO-001 Lincoln Cent, and yes it is mine. Found it roll searching a few years ago.
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