MrMitosis 的钱币相册
CAC Approved. Plain 4, no stems. In 1804 12 varieties were produced from 5 obverse and 6 reverse dies. The plain 4/no stems variety was coined from a single die pair (Cohen 13; Obverse 5/Reverse G). Uncirculated examples are scarce but are the most common 1804 half cent variety. Brown Mint State examples, like mine, are the easiest to find. The strike and luster on my example are phenomenal--and it was worth every one of the many pennies I paid for it.
CAC Approved. Plain 4, no stems. In 1804 12 varieties were produced from 5 obverse and 6 reverse dies. The plain 4/no stems variety was coined from a single die pair (Cohen 13; Obverse 5/Reverse G). Uncirculated examples are scarce but are the most common 1804 half cent variety. Brown Mint State examples, like mine, are the easiest to find. The strike and luster on my example are phenomenal--and it was worth every one of the many pennies I paid for it.
CAC Approved. Plain 4, no stems. In 1804 12 varieties were produced from 5 obverse and 6 reverse dies. The plain 4/no stems variety was coined from a single die pair (Cohen 13; Obverse 5/Reverse G). Uncirculated examples are scarce but are the most common 1804 half cent variety. Brown Mint State examples, like mine, are the easiest to find. The strike and luster on my example are phenomenal--and it was worth every one of the many pennies I paid for it.
CAC Approved. Plain 4, no stems. In 1804 12 varieties were produced from 5 obverse and 6 reverse dies. The plain 4/no stems variety was coined from a single die pair (Cohen 13; Obverse 5/Reverse G). Uncirculated examples are scarce but are the most common 1804 half cent variety. Brown Mint State examples, like mine, are the easiest to find. The strike and luster on my example are phenomenal--and it was worth every one of the many pennies I paid for it.
CAC Approved. Had is crossed from a NGC into a PCG slab. Great cartwheel luster, clean fields, even toning, solid strike! EAC MS62. Looks to be Breen's State VI to VII (with prominent clash marks within the wreath on the reverse.
CAC Approved. Had is crossed from a NGC into a PCG slab. Great cartwheel luster, clean fields, even toning, solid strike! EAC MS62. Looks to be Breen's State VI to VII (with prominent clash marks within the wreath on the reverse.
CAC Approved. Had is crossed from a NGC into a PCG slab. Great cartwheel luster, clean fields, even toning, solid strike! EAC MS62. Looks to be Breen's State VI to VII (with prominent clash marks within the wreath on the reverse.
129,694 minted and CAC approved. None grade better in any color. DS-1.0. A sharply struck even medium brown Uber-GEM type representative with some red in the devices. The satiny surfaces show only minor imperfections.
129,694 minted and CAC approved. None grade better in any color. DS-1.0. A sharply struck even medium brown Uber-GEM type representative with some red in the devices. The satiny surfaces show only minor imperfections.
129,694 minted and CAC approved. None grade better in any color. DS-1.0. A sharply struck even medium brown Uber-GEM type representative with some red in the devices. The satiny surfaces show only minor imperfections.
Choice lustrous medium steel brown and light olive with a third of the mint red remaining on both sides. The only notable marks, and they are trivial, are a small puff of darker bluish steel toning at the dentil tips right of star 11 and faint traces of an old fingerprint on the front of the face. MDS. The die cracks on the reverse are clear (an un-cracked example is unknown) and fine die clash marks are visible on both sides. Not seen by Noyes or Bland. The N3 attribution and Ahumada provenance are noted on the label. Tied for finest RB of the variety at both services. Ex Heritage 1991 Spring ANA Sale, lot 92 (lot ticket included).
Choice lustrous medium steel brown and light olive with a third of the mint red remaining on both sides. The only notable marks, and they are trivial, are a small puff of darker bluish steel toning at the dentil tips right of star 11 and faint traces of an old fingerprint on the front of the face. MDS. The die cracks on the reverse are clear (an un-cracked example is unknown) and fine die clash marks are visible on both sides. Not seen by Noyes or Bland. The N3 attribution and Ahumada provenance are noted on the label. Tied for finest RB of the variety at both services. Ex Heritage 1991 Spring ANA Sale, lot 92 (lot ticket included).
Choice lustrous medium steel brown and light olive with a third of the mint red remaining on both sides. The only notable marks, and they are trivial, are a small puff of darker bluish steel toning at the dentil tips right of star 11 and faint traces of an old fingerprint on the front of the face. MDS. The die cracks on the reverse are clear (an un-cracked example is unknown) and fine die clash marks are visible on both sides. Not seen by Noyes or Bland. The N3 attribution and Ahumada provenance are noted on the label. Tied for finest RB of the variety at both services. Ex Heritage 1991 Spring ANA Sale, lot 92 (lot ticket included).
CAC approved; N-7 attrition on slab; R-2. This dusky brick-red premium GEM is free of marks and has only a few minute obverse toning freckles. The strike is good despite a few soft star centers. An outstanding Mature Head type coin. Likely part of a 1933 “Bank Holiday” horde (see Breen, page 211). EAC MS64. Ex: Central States Signature (Heritage, 4/2009), lot 1064. Early on this coin was housed in a different PCGS Holder (40588166/12923755) and sold on 1/4/12 by Heritage as a CAC coin, before the (variety) holder switch. It is the prime CoinFacts example of both the 1850 RB and a N-7.
CAC approved; N-7 attrition on slab; R-2. This dusky brick-red premium GEM is free of marks and has only a few minute obverse toning freckles. The strike is good despite a few soft star centers. An outstanding Mature Head type coin. Likely part of a 1933 “Bank Holiday” horde (see Breen, page 211). EAC MS64. Ex: Central States Signature (Heritage, 4/2009), lot 1064. Early on this coin was housed in a different PCGS Holder (40588166/12923755) and sold on 1/4/12 by Heritage as a CAC coin, before the (variety) holder switch. It is the prime CoinFacts example of both the 1850 RB and a N-7.
CAC approved; N-7 attrition on slab; R-2. This dusky brick-red premium GEM is free of marks and has only a few minute obverse toning freckles. The strike is good despite a few soft star centers. An outstanding Mature Head type coin. Likely part of a 1933 “Bank Holiday” horde (see Breen, page 211). EAC MS64. Ex: Central States Signature (Heritage, 4/2009), lot 1064. Early on this coin was housed in a different PCGS Holder (40588166/12923755) and sold on 1/4/12 by Heritage as a CAC coin, before the (variety) holder switch. It is the prime CoinFacts example of both the 1850 RB and a N-7.
CAC approved; N-7 attrition on slab; R-2. This dusky brick-red premium GEM is free of marks and has only a few minute obverse toning freckles. The strike is good despite a few soft star centers. An outstanding Mature Head type coin. Likely part of a 1933 “Bank Holiday” horde (see Breen, page 211). EAC MS64. Ex: Central States Signature (Heritage, 4/2009), lot 1064. Early on this coin was housed in a different PCGS Holder (40588166/12923755) and sold on 1/4/12 by Heritage as a CAC coin, before the (variety) holder switch. It is the prime CoinFacts example of both the 1850 RB and a N-7.