which of these two things makes the obverse, the obverse!? You vote!
1907Quarter
Posts: 2,770
1.portrait
2.date
as we know, many coins do not have BOTH of these on the same side.
2.date
as we know, many coins do not have BOTH of these on the same side.
0
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New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
Dennis
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It's a heads vs tails thing. To me, "heads" is always the obverse.
al h.
Depends on the coin. I think the obverse of a state quarter is the portrait side regardless of the date location.
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K S
On U.S. coins the obverse is defined by a portrait.
al h.
al h.
<< <i>Portrait 1st. If no portrait, date. >>
I agree with this method. It seems like there are exceptions to everything. I flipped through the Redbook and noticed that "Liberty" and "In God We Trust" (if it's there) pretty consistently appears on what is considered to be the obverse, the only exception being Morgans. Are the state quarters the only example of a date on the side opposite a portrait, and, if so, what were they thinking?
and this is normally determined largely by the orientation of the coin when it
was struck. Then to really confuse things they strike some coins up-side-down.
Perhaps they can claim artistic intent?
OK, let's just call it the dated side then.