I concur. Not worth the hassle and expense of certification. Nice coin to stick in an album, but not worth slabbing.
This.
Neat.
Since you're armed with the book and I am not, you're already a quantum leap ahead of me, so all I can do is shrug. Attempting to identify any...
Fancy serial numbers (indeed, paper currency in general) is not my area, but yeah, it's kinda neat....
I always kinda liked it, before it became politically taboo. I'm from Georgia, after all, and Stone Mountain is a beautiful place, despite its...
I added this Claudius sestertius since the last time I replied to this thread. [ATTACH] [ATTACH] [ATTACH]
Nice matched set!
Here are two more "sentimentals" from my collection. Both are fairly low-value modern World coins, but they represent the two foreign countries I...
This metal detecting find is one of several "sentimental" coins for me. All of my detector finds are sentimental, in a way, because I can look at...
Not necessarily. They just saw heavy circulation. Remember, small change was scarce in the US before and during the Civil War, which is also why...
I'll bet there are some in the dirt up there where you've been diggin', Sal. The very first half dime I ever dug (in NC) was an 1829 Capped Bust...
Really nice! I've had a few, including at least one regular proof and one Cameo proof, but this MS example was the last one I had in my...
Here's one in an early NGC slab, from my Giveaway Gallery. Anybody who wants a shot at it can enter my current giveaway, if you haven't already,...
Lovely! The highest grade Bust half I've ever owned was an AU53. It was a white coin, like yours. My present Capped Bust half type coin is...
This is an entry post for Dongdong2 on CollecOnline, who is a Korean high school student who messaged me directly on that site (due to difficulty...
I might make a similar swap, just for variety's sake, if nothing else. I have plenty of gold but at present do not hold any platinum. In fact,...
@Randy Abercrombie will be donating and shipping the prizes for the odd-numbered rounds (#1, 3, 5, 7, 9, and 11). I will be donating and shipping...
Our 16th and 17th century Georgia missions are even less well known. I found a numismatic clue to the site of one of them, once, while metal...
Oh! But I found some other mentions of “Traos” when I Googled it!
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