Earliest U.S. Type/major varieties 1793-1807 的展示图片库
C-2. CAC cert. This coin is at least a FR02. Much of the date and all legends are visible in person, and the surfaces are rock-solid.
C-2a Low-Relief Head. Great chocolate brown color. Self-submitted crossover from ANACS F12.
C-1a Lettered Edge. Solid coin with a small planchet flaw as the only detraction
G6. C-6a Plain Edge, No Pole. Nice glossy tan color and smooth surfaces. PCGS uses my coin for their Photograde G6 example which is pretty cool. Self-submitted.
C-2 "Centered Head" LDS with die break from fraction through UNI. It can be difficult to find nice examples of this particular variety.
C-3b. Really not in bad shape for this rare variety. Only 17 examples have actually been given a grade by PCGS. Self-submitted..
C-3a. The scarcer "Low Head" variety, the same die pairing as the lettered and the uber-rare gripped edge. Color and surfaces are well above average.
C-4 Large 6/Stems. Supposed to be a common variety, but it has only 1/5 the population of the Small 6/No Stems.
S-1 AMERI. reverse. Important variety. Excellent detail for the grade.
S-3 Great color and surfaces. More detail, including a partial date, is visible in person.
S-6. "Sprung Die" variety. Early die state. Wreaths were a “holy grail” coin to me as a young collector and I’m quite happy with this very nice example.
S-11, b or c (I would need to have it reholdered to tell for sure.) Obverse is G4 with a sharp full date in person.
S-13. FR details. Full date and absolutely original color and rock-solid surfaces. It has the slightest bend which kept it from grading out. Outstanding and scarce. The key coin of the 1793 series. Ex-David L Kahn and Shawn A. Yancey
S-19a. R5+ Edge leaf pointing down. "Edge of 1793" listed on holder. Enough of the reverse left to make the number attribution. Great surfaces & color. Self-submitted.
S-19b. R4+. Solid, glossy chocolate brown surfaces and sharp bust detail. Above average for a head of '93. Self-submitted.
S-43 R2+ MDS. One of the "Short Bust" varieties. Fully struck and centered on an extremely thick planchet. Color and surfaces are choice.
S-71. Head of 1795. Solid coin. Ex-Jack D. Young. Self-submitted.
Amazing Double Strike with first strike 20% Off-Center. Ms. Liberty looks a bit "two-faced"
S-87. Heavy die-lapping makes this the "Open Mouth" variety. Ex: Tom Deck. Self-Submitted.
S-140 LDS with sinking dies causing weakness in the date and parts of the reverse. Currently one of the G4 photos in CoinFacts. Self-submitted.
S-161 First Hair Style. Noyes Condition Census #20. Stunning color and surfaces. Ex-Shawn A Yancey.
Sharp devices, especially the beautifully detailed bust, suggest a grade higher than AG3. The weaker obverse rims are the likely cause for the lower net. The coin appears to have been struck on a slightly convexoconcave planchet, thus causing some differential wear.
LM-2 R4. Great little coin. The photos don't do it justice. Blue and orange iridescent toning in person. The reverse is far more complete than the pics suggest as well.
JR-1 as evidenced by the large cud on obverse. The first die-pairing of our nation's first dime. Self-submitted
Great overdate variety with a tiny 8 trying to cover a huge 7. Beautiful coin. Iridescent toning in person. The odd looking 16-star reverse die, with its long-necked eagle, was originally used on the 1797 quarter eagle. Ex-Shawn A Yancey
Browning 2. Nice low-grade example of this first and only year type. Ex-Jerry Golz.
VF20. Very pretty toning on this coin. Obverse also has rainbow highlights but it is not so visible in pic. Currently used as one of the VF20 examples in CoinFacts. Self-submitted.
BB-13, B-9. 2-leaves. R4. Head of 1794. First obverse die of 1795. Gorgeous and ultra-PQ coin. These were “holy grail” coins for me as a young collector.
Beyond original. Looks like it spent 200 years in a dusty spare change jar after being liberally circulated. Charmingly crusty. Self-submitted NGC crossover.
Breen-6834, Taraszka-8, BD-2, High R.4. VF details. Light Non-Verbal Scrawling on Obverse. For now, it's the only way I can afford an 18th century gold coin. Scarcer than the 1799 and still quite attractive.