Once again, my attribution failure and great frustration was due to a missing piece in the die crack break guide. I really hope I am not the only one who winds up buying unneeded duplicates because of such a simple thing that, when fixed, eventually benefits many others down the road. I have already...
I can provide photos of the cracks for a coin that currently does not have a listing in the 1921-P die crack break guide, but who knows how to create the lines on the obverse and reverse templates?
Update:
No it's not a D2. It's a D1 like I first thought. But it's not in the &#^(@!! D1 die crack break guide, despite having several very large cracks. ARGH!!
I don't have this in hand yet. Does anyone recognize these very LDS cracks – especially the ones through ONE? I found nothing remotely close in several looks through the die crack break guide. Thanks for any suggestions!
unknown D1 LDS obv.jpg (284.61 KiB) Viewed 164 times
unknown D1 LDS rev.jpg (277.29 KiB) Viewed 164 times
In circulated grades prices have collapsed in recent years. Prices more than 5 years old are more than just meaningless, they should not even be looked at because they will give a coin owner a false sense of current worth. In Mint state grades they have almost never come up for sale. I have a grand ...
I know I just thought it was funny, I sent in 3 1921 S and got back 2 and 1 extra 1921 P
I'm going to guess that this 1921-S only gets designated as a 1921-S if it is also attributed as a VAM, which, of course, requires a VAM attribution fee. Was that the case with this particular coin?
I bought a BU roll from BigJayVee early last month – the first time we had done business together. It was a flawlessly smooth transaction and he was a kind, helpful and knowledgeable man.
Rest in peace, and best wishes to all of his family and friends.
is this item struck into the die, or is it something that was struck onto, and retained on the coin?
It is a recessed-into-the-coin impression.
The first photo gives the optical illusion of being raised, as often happens with photos of the LIBERTY letters on the headband.
We in the coin universe might be interested to know about the mayhem that has been going on lately in the sports and trading card world – specifically at PSA, the card grading brother of PCGS. It is something to keep in mind whenever we think the cost of grading our coins is too high. In 2020, Covid...
When all of the "lists" were put together, some easy coins were intentionally included... coins that people could find that might get them excited about the lists as a whole. Had the lists consisted only of very rare coins, very few people would have found very few of them, they would probably get f...
You neglected to mention it's a 1921-D in your first post. That changes things a lot when it comes to a prooflike question. D-mint 1921s are extremely rare and highly sought after. Unfortunately, judging whether any 1921 Morgan is PL or not is essentially impossible by pictures alone. I personally w...
That obverse is extraordinarily well struck. What does the reverse look like? I believe it will turn out to be a D1 reverse, due to the small 'dot' to the right of the base of the 1st 1 in the date..