I was joking. Dies are suppose to be in reverse or negative. Dave Bowers did an artical on slip dies about 20 years ago for CoinWorld. The idea...
It looks a slip die. Maybe to to change chapters rather than denominations? Is it a two piece die?
That must be an error die. Everything is backwards.
Does it mention if the coin is a cast or why it has those heavy straight lines?
Does the surface have real heavy lines on it or is that the image?
It's kind a cool looking whatever it is.:D
Congrats to "d" (4 times), dwhiz, and Mr. Numismatist. They have derivatives for everything. Why hasn't anyone invented some kind of GTG...
I'll bet on @dwhiz being right--MS66. :D
It's my birth year. :D
Perfect date.
That sure was a sharp eye, @dwhiz to pick that up.
The moose looks like he's making a delivery. :p
Always nice to win one.
Never mind. AI had the answer.
What kind of business is that?
Just talking about the Mint reflects on the director who's appointed by a president.
I actually joined that club some time in 1979 or 1978. It cost $10 and I got a membership card and a 1921 Morgan. I don't really remember anything...
C-O-I-N-S 1971 aka Coins Of International Nations Society. M/A 34mm 12.31 grams cupro-nickel. Apologies for the images' color. That was as close...
Three inch token LOL. Like the main devices on a Buff aren't big enough? :troll:
I don't care for proofs but your photography sure is superb. :)
Separate names with a comma.