Fred I love that word! I’m glad you dragged that one out again it’s very appropriate here. But Alas I fear..... Reed
Theres one way to tell for sure. Is there any one of you knkow what that way is. Please enlighten me. Dont hold back now. prove me wrong.
As you said useless, there are many that come here thinking they have found the holy grail, very few actually have a variety or error. It gets tiresome when they think they know everything, and don't listen.
I would see if you could get one of the hobby's leading authorities on numismatic errors to take a look at your pics and give you his opinion
Yall gang up real quick. But none of ya know cant one of ya help all of ya out. So sence im tired and dont listen what is the only way to prove me right or wrong. And then you will know how i feel.
and I'll let you in on the deal. With having seven of them. I'm feeling like a million dollars. But I don't do this for the money.
It's called years of collected experience. And an OP that thinks he is right and everyone else wrong. In order to make this work you have to be willing to listen and provide better photos, that explain in detail what you see
I’m not sure, I think this guy might be a real star trooper. He’s definitely out there. If not he knows we’re I stand and he may never receive help from me again!
Not sure what the OP is asking us - Your Barber Quarters aren't overdates whatsoever - However, if you don't wish to believe us, I strongly suggest that you pay $25-$65 per coin to submit them to any of the top three Certification Services, and have them authenticate them as overdates. It will be a complete waste of your money, but then you'll know the facts, and the truth. If you choose not to, I fully understand, but then please don't tell us you have 6 of 'em, and they're all rare and valuable overdate Barber Quarters.
You lost me with 'pareidolia'. Couldn't find it in the dictionary. But I'm inclined to agree with just about anything you have to say about this thread.
Pareidolia is a type of apophenia, which is a more generalized term for seeing patterns in random data. Some common examples are seeing a likeness of Jesus in the clouds or an image of a man on the surface of the moon. This stained cent of mine is an example of a numismatic pareidolia.
Hey Finn this guy is battling about a 67 half in his other error thread and he is loosing, go check it out. Reed
I have having the time of my life. I play the best looking idiot u ever seen. But wait to you turely understand and you will with out a doubt. Find out i get way bigger of a kick out of it than you ever will.