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A trio of 1944 Walkers for your viewing pleasure
by coinsarefun on 13 Nov, 2009 12:09
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Reply #1
by walmann on 13 Nov, 2009 15:39
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Looks like some strike doubling on the reverse of the Philly.
Attractive coins.
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Reply #2
by LotsoLuck on 13 Nov, 2009 18:52
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Those have a bit of the wow factor eh?
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Reply #3
by FilthyBroke on 13 Nov, 2009 19:32
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Neat coins! Your pics? They look great! What is going on under the first "A" in America on the '44 P?
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Reply #4
by coinsarefun on 13 Nov, 2009 19:59
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Neat coins! Your pics? They look great!
What is going on under the first "A" in America on the '44 P?
I wish they were my pic's They are part of a huge batch I sent to Mark Goodman............ .............he's da' man I think what people are seeing on the 44P is shadows or something
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Reply #5
by FilthyBroke on 13 Nov, 2009 20:17
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I was thinking lamination or planchet defect. That's what I love about macro photography - studying the details of the surface and the design intricasies.
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Reply #6
by coinsarefun on 13 Nov, 2009 20:19
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I was thinking lamination or planchet defect. That's what I love about macro photography - studying the details of the surface and the design intricasies.
Could be toning also?
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Reply #7
by FilthyBroke on 13 Nov, 2009 20:28
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I was thinking lamination or planchet defect. That's what I love about macro photography - studying the details of the surface and the design intricasies.
Could be toning also?
I'm not sure we're looking at the same thing. This is what caught my eye-
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Reply #8
by coinsarefun on 13 Nov, 2009 20:50
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I was thinking lamination or planchet defect. That's what I love about macro photography - studying the details of the surface and the design intricasies.
Could be toning also?
I'm not sure we're looking at the same thing. This is what caught my eye-
Hmmmm, now you have me wondering. I will ask Mark for a really big image and maybe a close up
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Reply #9
by coinsarefun on 15 Nov, 2009 13:42
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I was thinking lamination or planchet defect. That's what I love about macro photography - studying the details of the surface and the design intricasies.
Mark Goodman did a closeup of that area.........kinda neat Looks like a diebreak
Could be toning also?
I'm not sure we're looking at the same thing. This is what caught my eye-
Hmmmm, now you have me wondering. I will ask Mark for a really big image and maybe a close up
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