Thanks to the Statehood Quarter Program, coin collecting has never been more popular. And to take advantage of this new interest in the hobby, we're giving our complete line of Whitman Classic Coin Folders a beautiful new look. -- Multi-million dollar cover updates for the entire Whitman line! -- True-to-life foil colors reflect and beautifully represent the coins each folder holds -- e.g. Copper foil for Lincoln Cents, Silver foil for Jefferson Nickels. -- Traditional Whitman blue vinyl matches past Whitman products.
To do its part in the war effort, the U.S. Mint changed from a copper cent to a zinc-coated steel version for one year, in 1943. Rumor quickly spread that anyone who found a 1943 copper cent would be rewarded with a car from Ford. Now you can display your collection of the legendary Lincoln cents of 1909 to 1958 in this beautiful four-panel coin folder. Larger in size than the average folder, this unit has room for 144 coins, the most of any similar folder.
Become a smarter buyer and collector of the popular buffalo and Jefferson nickels. Bowers provides historical background, grading, and collecting information.
From the beginning the Jefferson Nickel has held a spot in coin collecting lore. Shortly after its release in 1938 rumors of its recall, and consequently a rush on the coins began, after many believed the depiction of the White House on the coin's reverse was missing its U.S. flag. The truth was the image on the reverse wasn't the White House, but Jefferson's Virginia home, Monticello. With this professional-quality three-panel coin folder you can proudly display your pieces of history - the 74 Jefferson nickels issued between 1938 and 1967.
Welcome to the Jefferson Nickel and Roosevelt Dime Error Coin Guide for 2021. The wide range of auction prices paid for error coins makes this guide necessary for a collector to evaluate, encapsulate, or purchase an error coin. There are three significant categories of coin errors: - Planchet errors - clipped planchets - elliptical, fragment, ragged, tapered, thin, and thick. Wrong planchet, foreign planchet - Die errors - broken dies, collars, and doubled dies, - Striking errors - Bonded, broadstruck, brockage, clashed dies, cracks, double struck, indent, flip over, and much more. After 20 years, this coin guide remains unsurpassed and the most comprehensive error coin guide available. No other guide has the number of error listings and error types as presented in this guide. Even with the US Mint using the best technology for producing billions of Jefferson nickels and Roosevelt dimes, there are still modern-day errors in circulation. The wear and tear on the dies, the dies' reworking, and malfunctions in the minting process create many mint errors escaping detection.With so many error coin listings in this book, it would be a significant challenge to add photographs for each error. Error definitions with photos in this guide show the types of errors that can occur and should represent most errors.
Do you immediately turn to the date on every shiny coin you pick up? Are you one of the few people who knows when the next new state quarter or presidential dollar is coming out - before they hit the bank? Have you ever wondered why the person in front of you at the bank was buying all those rolls of coins? If you answered yes to these and other questions like this in the Everything Guide, ? YOU MIGHT BE A COIN COLLECTOR! Collecting on a budget will provide you with tips and tidbits to nurture your interest in the type of coins that intrigue you, turning your holdings into a safe and potentially valuable investment. Nolte provides a fun-filled journey allowing you to navigate one of the world's most exciting hobbies. Enter your next bourse feeling like a veteran. Make your experiences cost cutting, time saving, doubt erasing resulting in an eye pleasing and funfilled coin collection.