18th Century, The Hard Way 的钱币相册
C-2. CAC cert. This coin is certainly undergraded in my humble opinion. Much of the date and all legends are visible in person, there is zero porosity, and the color is beautiful. Scratches are on holder, not the coin. Seriously thinking of having it regraded.
C-2a Low-Relief Head. Great chocolate brown color. Self-submitted crossover from ANACS F12.
C-2 "Centered Head" LDS with die break from fraction through UNI. It can be difficult to find nice examples of this particular variety.
S-1 AMERI. reverse. Important variety. Excellent detail for the grade.
S-6. "Sprung Die" variety. I’ve loved wreaths ever since I first opened a Red Book as a kid and I’m quite happy with this very nice example.
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-43 R2+ MDS. One of the "Short Bust" varieties. Fully struck and centered on an extraordinarily thick planchet. Nice color and surfaces.
S-161 First Hair Style. Noyes Condition Census #20. Stunning color and surfaces. Ex-Shawn A Yancey.
Sharp devices 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 convex planchet, thus causing some differential wear.
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.
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.
BB-73, B-1. 9X7 Stars, Large Letters. Can't get much better for a small eagle dollar in this grade range. Very sharp and attractive.
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.