Probably work on different programs. One I've used for many years and familiar with it.
They always look tough or used a lot. Kind of like cars. Any car in new condition is desired. One with several hundred thousands of miles are less...
I made a duplicate image to keep both images in tact and transferred over the strip in the center. I used hue/saturation and adjusted the...
Just a little help from Photo shop.
gbroke: With a image program you could make a real interesting adjust ment to your image: [img]
If it were a die gash, it would be raised and not incuse on the coin.
Titanic: A dime is shown in one scene. A barber.
Looks like a struck though grease/oil. The fields and the devices are affected around the neck. Note the pattern on the fields, just a strike through.
There is not tag any longer. 8(
It's harder to find them without than ones with it.
Lincoln tears. LOL [img]
Some are pretty though. [img]
[img]
Wow! A wrong metal Ike. Nice. LOL
I'll see your 1959D-1MM-010 and lower your RPM to 1959D-1MM-009: [img]
http://www.pcgs.com/photograde/#/DrapedBustCent/Grades I agree G6.
Looks like it was squashed with a socket or a piece of pipe. If it were a mint error, the opposite side would not be distorted. Just PMD.
All I see in the images is a normal dime. A clue to where to look would be helpful and a close up of that area.
Here is one that toned in my Dansco Album. It wasn't looking like that when I put it in there. [img] I was trying to show which image was best.
http://imgs.inkfrog.com/pix/coop49/1910S-1MM-002.jpg http://imgs.inkfrog.com/pix/coop49/1912S1MM001.jpg...
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