I'll say 65 on this one. The obverse had me thinking there could be a touch of rub on Jefferson's shoulder, but there's nothing else on the...
Nice! I'll go with 67. 41-Ds come nice.
Errors can be hard to value, since they're all unique. While I don't deal with errors, I'll take you through my thought process. I see the 1945...
While rainbow toned Lincolns that are both legit and attractive do exist and sell for premiums, the ones you show I would classify as "having a...
I agree that it would grade EF-AU. Composition is silver gilt, so the plating was done at the mint. If the plating were done elsewhere, it would...
Yes. VAM 29A. Too much wear to see the fat die break between the denticles, though. The "evil mimic" to this, VAM 35A, has a similar die crack,...
I wonder if this was an ill-fated alteration gone horribly wrong.
I was just a few years into collecting cheap stuff as a kid and was pretty much priced out of anything silver. I probably could have sold the...
Thinking (way) outside the box to figure out what makes it "pretty neat," I guess you could draw parallels to how it lived its life and ended up a...
The winning bidder then executed a jump bid to $20,000,000 to gain notoriety. TPGs didn't offer to create a special "pre-release" label? Buyer...
Don't dwell on having a matched set in a single grade. Buy nice 64s of the common dates and attractive lower grades of the tough ones. My 28 is a...
It means the spots aren't big or bad enough for them to say "environmental damage." Without the spots, they may have called it 65BN, since the...
1723 Rosa Americana penny [img] and 2 pence [img]
As silly as assigning numerical grades to some errors is, you would grade this as you would grade any non-error coin. Wear: Not seeing any....
Looks like I'm at table 1115.
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