My first purchase from Heritage Auction .

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Kevin wu, Jan 10, 2017.

  1. Pickin and Grinin

    Pickin and Grinin Well-Known Member

    Nice piece, You can file that one under "good will". Just say leaving to P&G
     
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  3. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member

    That is S-P-E-C-T-A-C-U-L-A-R!!


     
  4. DBDc80

    DBDc80 Numismatist

    tmp_13306-lf(2)-1918437750.jpg tmp_13306-lf(3)1199398734.jpg Very unusual.... and nice! Poor George has his head on backwards!! I picked up a little something from them recently as well....first seated dollar! Really taking a liking to the seated stuff!
     
  5. scottishmoney

    scottishmoney Buh bye

    And lack of quality control is not a new thing apparently, since that coin is 59 years old now. Very cool piece, particularly as a proof.
     
  6. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank


    The normal one.

    :)
     
  7. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    amazing, and possibly unique.
     
  8. Kevin wu

    Kevin wu Well-Known Member

    This one really catch my eyes, especially love silver proof , still waiting shipment come from heritage next week .
     
  9. Salspi

    Salspi Member

    I don't understand that either... wouldn't the lettering be concave on the reverse? I'm as far from an experienced collector as can be but this made sense to me.
     
  10. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    I'm sure all the reverse detail is incuse/concave. Your brain refuses to perceive it that way, though, because

    a) you're used to seeing that design in relief;
    b) you're seeing only a single shot, with no perspective from motion or binocular vision;
    c) you don't know where the lighting is coming from.
     
  11. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title] Supporter

    As I understand it, yes. The "backwards" size should have all the details incuse. Based on the photos...that's how it is too.
     
  12. Salspi

    Salspi Member

    Ah- my brain is tricking me.
     
  13. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    That's actually a good sign. It's behaving normally. :)
     
  14. Garlicus

    Garlicus Debt is dumb, cash is king.

    Glad I'm not the only one having issues with this, lol.
    Still looks raised to me.
     
  15. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title] Supporter

    So I wanted to see it close up so I found the auction itself. When you look at those photos zoomed in it becomes clear.
     
  16. Garlicus

    Garlicus Debt is dumb, cash is king.

    Nope. Still no luck.

    Never could see images in those posters that you're suppose to stare at either, lol.
     
  17. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title] Supporter

    Lol. I was able to see those if I crossed my eyes first. You could try that here. :D
     
  18. Garlicus

    Garlicus Debt is dumb, cash is king.

    Still no luck.

    Funny thing is, sometimes I can 'see' images (misplaced letters and numbers) on some coins that others say aren't there. I guess my reality is a little different than others, lol.
     
    CamaroDMD likes this.
  19. Michael K

    Michael K Well-Known Member

    It seemed like raised surfaces to me, but I assumed it wouldn't be certified if not incuse. Maybe someone can post photos of it from a different angle/ lighting that show it is incused?
    Never seen anything like this, and it is a winner.
     
  20. SuperDave

    SuperDave Free the Cartwheels!

    I still haven't managed to "see" it as incuse yet, even though I usually can. Look at it from a different standpoint: Both sides of the coin would have been imaged consecutively, under the same camera with the same lighting. Now, compare the bright and shadow parts of each image - they're inverted. The only way that happens is if one is positive and one is negative. Otherwise, the lighting artifacts on the images would be identical.
     
  21. jtlee321

    jtlee321 Well-Known Member

    This is funny. The second I saw the images, I saw the obverse as relief and the reverse as incuse. I know that the brain takes a short cut in defining what you see when it see's something familiar. In this case, it recognizes a human head and by nature, it knows a human head is in relief. So the assumption is automatically made that anytime a human face is seen, your brain stops analyzing the structure and assumes relief. It's pretty cool how you can trick your brain.

    Here's the ultimate video in how your brain will confuse you. It's a well known optical illusion of a paper dragon.

     
    -jeffB likes this.
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