A little handful of 1901. Canada one, five, and ten cent coins. Hong Kong cent. Mexico 20 centavo. Netherlands cent. One thing worth noting is that the reverse of the Canada and Hong Kong coins depict Victoria for the final year.
Not the best image quality, but here's a German pfennig from 1892. I've recently started accumulating the one- and two-pfennig coins. Seems like a fun collection, since they are everywhere in junk bins, and they have such a long run, and then there are multiple mints... it has several elements for a fun collection idea. Anyway, check it.
Rodebaugh wrote:Time for the King. Same coin in both pics....Diff Plastic
Is this the stuff you make your RodeBars out of? That's why they turn out so pretty! Seriously though... when you have a 64DMPL, what makes you break it out to re-send it? Was it the hope for a 65 and the much heftier price tag that comes with it? How often does this work? Have you ever re-sent one and gotten a grade lower? Or gotten the same numerical grade but lost the DMPL or other designation? I would think the cost of submission would cost-prohibitive unless the UPgrade was a pretty safe bet...
Hold up, Tex! Please keep your posts to one year each. That gives others at least a little chance to jump in with the next year after you. Thanks for joining the team!
I was expecting, after all those Morgans, that someone would want to poke the last (first) year in... but instead, I'm breaking into the BRITISH collection. Here are four 1878 British coins. One interesting thing about the sixpence, shillings, and florins from 1864-79 is that they all had the die numbers on them. Here in the second picture is the first such example of that.