High Leaf and Low Leaf "designs" of the Wisconsin quarter from Denver in 2004 breathed new life into collecting statehood quarters , it gets my vote as the best design of 2004. And personally, I think they "saved the day".
Wisconsin quarter gets my vote !! Originally, a coin with a cow, cheese and a stalk of corn seemed ugly. That was true until the Denver Mint employee(s) added the famous Extra Leaf designs intentionally and created an instant modern day classic. Even if one wants to poo - poo the Extra Leaves, one cannot escape the excitement and interest that these rare modern classics have generated. It says alot when a current quarter can still command a premium over face six years after they were released.
Iowa's use of the famous painting is quite good -- the house takes on good relief and perspective, and overall there's a heartland feel that comes through.
The MI is a surprise in the uncirculated grades. It might seem obvious, but when it's super-clean and scratch-free, the land's topography, the lakes, and the reverses's fields make a boring design actually very nice.
Some ballot box stuffing going on here. The Texas is boring.
Numismatist. 50 year member ANA. Winner of four ANA Heath Literary Awards; three Wayte and Olga Raymond Literary Awards; Numismatist of the Year Award 2009, and Lifetime Achievement Award 2020. Winner numerous NLG Literary Awards.
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The MI is a surprise in the uncirculated grades. It might seem obvious, but when it's super-clean and scratch-free, the land's topography, the lakes, and the reverses's fields make a boring design actually very nice.
I voted MI was best -- very contrarian I guess.
<< <i>Some ballot box stuffing going on here. The Texas is boring. >>
i think bush has something to do with that. wisconson is it