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Robert S. Lahti
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Robert S. Lahti replied to Robert S. Lahti's topic in US, World, and Ancient Coins
Golly I really hope you didn't all aid to why people would react to believe like that, implying to God's children with God's money what God's intent is for them with that attitude and that mouth. I'll pray for you. -
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Robert S. Lahti replied to Robert S. Lahti's topic in US, World, and Ancient Coins
No, I just don't like boring prose. I like using a very long and patiently developed way to not let one's grasp deteriorate, by what implication in assumption clouds perception before resolve reveals itself. I'm a writer, so that's just a thing I do now. Alot of people don't necessarily care to notice the difference. -
Fenntucky Mike reacted to a post in a topic: Nice to dream
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Robert S. Lahti replied to Robert S. Lahti's topic in US, World, and Ancient Coins
There's plenty of these dies, not exactly this early of a stage, on Wexler Doubled Dies. Both 1959 and 1959D DDR -
This should be good enough to garner plausible doubt to a remaining portion of removal surrounding the doubled full size pillar in the second port from the left of the same occuring designers initials on the class 2 reverse 1959 Lincoln Cent. The die known to be one of the most elusive Lincoln Cent Doubled Dies, is not in the die wear arena, not plausibly.
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tj96 reacted to a post in a topic: Nice to dream
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GoldFinger1969 reacted to a post in a topic: Nice to dream
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An actively installed doubled inner A from a removal line from a close AM, and a remaining errant image leg.
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rrantique reacted to a post in a topic: My only attributed coin so far
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Robert S. Lahti reacted to a post in a topic: My only attributed coin so far
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Chicago, Illinois Currency Exchange, receiving change at the counter. Chicago Ave, two streets from Michigan Ave.
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Staying focused on how resolve works together, a little of how this started, seeing as they were very private US Mint executions. The only area of the rusty die left is on Lincolns shirt of the 1958 cent which are all the pictures above, except the 1926. A die crack runs above VDB.
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We can see T, how there is the form of the image still inside its allowance of the body, but that form becomes doubled outside of the bodies allowance leading to a lack of firm square seating. Because only some scattered doubling ends up on the class 2 1c 1959 reverse. FG, ONE CENT, M-ICA, UN
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First 3 pictures: Before the strengthened restored obverse of 1959, it looked like this. The bottom of 9 shows a misaligned doubling with an errant 9 hubbed above, (under) which on Denver just happens to be missing the large loop tip. Last picture: The next is the full beautiful restored obverse of 1959, we all know. Just the R in its modification doubling. Doubling not only on the subsurface leg, but on the revised R face. Two types.
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You want to know what a realistic listed doubled die reflects Class 7 doubling. How it is clear between years what the difference of change is. Liberty R has always had a slightly longer lead leg before the 1961 1c WWHO-(Wexler Doubled Dies) But during this working hub doubling, and after through Lincoln Memorial cent years, the back leg becomes slightly longer.