Orange Peel Peace Dollars

I find these attractive although I can see why others don't (as the strike always appear soft with finer details lacking).
I suppose these are struck at the end of a die cycle but either way, the look is cool in my book.
Here's a recent example I picked up:
(The cloudiness on the obverse is the plastic slab.)

I suppose these are struck at the end of a die cycle but either way, the look is cool in my book.
Here's a recent example I picked up:
(The cloudiness on the obverse is the plastic slab.)


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--Severian the Lame
A few years ago, I came across a '24 very similar looking to this coin. The coin was so weakly struck there was no hair detail at all.
It was in a 66 holder too.
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pretty clean 24...grade is????
rainbowroosie April 1, 2003
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<< <i>NGC MS65 in an old fatty, heat-stamp logo reverse holder. >>
Nice for a white coin Tom!
<< <i>Yuck. Just reminds me how weakly struck these are to begin with. Such a pity they did not make regular issue proofs of these. >>
It is not weakly-struck. It is actually well-struck. But it is a very late die state (worn dies with a lot of surface flow abrasion).
The way this design was sculpted originally, the die surfaces are not condusive to die polishing.
The fields on the original sculpture are very uneven. For example, there is a trough at the back of Liberty's neck.
That corresponds to a ridge on the die. There is no way to really polish the dies without knocking down that ridge entirely.
<< <i>
<< <i>Yuck. Just reminds me how weakly struck these are to begin with. Such a pity they did not make regular issue proofs of these. >>
It is not weakly-struck. It is actually well-struck. But it is a very late die state (worn dies with a lot of surface flow abrasion).
The way this design was sculpted originally, the die surfaces are not condusive to die polishing.
The fields on the original sculpture are very uneven. For example, there is a trough at the back of Liberty's neck.
That corresponds to a ridge on the die. There is no way to really polish the dies without knocking down that ridge entirely. >>
Excellent information Daniel.
I didn't know that.
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I'm not a huge fan of the toning on this coin, but the texture is quite striking....
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<< <i>Looks like LDS rather than Orange peel (commonly seen on proof IHC's, for example, making them worth a premium). >>
I actually think it was a rusty/ poor die. If it was inherent to die life it would be more common on the series and most of the coins I have seen with the effect have been 24p (owned a few) and 22d's.
Here is a peace dollar that has a different effect.
I note that some of the other ones posted here are a lot less "mushy" than the OP.
<< <i>I've noticed this is most common on the 1924.
A few years ago, I came across a '24 very similar looking to this coin. The coin was so weakly struck there was no hair detail at all.
It was in a 66 holder too. >>
I had a '24 just like this. PCGS MS66. I tried but couldn't love it. Sold it to Larry S. who later told me DW loved it and bought it immediately.
Here's a crappy photo taken several years ago.
Lance.
<< <i>OK, so instead of "not well struck" how about I call it "mushy?"
I note that some of the other ones posted here are a lot less "mushy" than the OP. >>
Len, perhaps you meant that they are low relief, not poorly struck. Doesn't matter how well struck something is, if there isn't much difference between the fields and the devices, the details just aren't going to look sculpted and defined. That's my only beef with the peace dollar design, there's low definition.
<< <i>Not crazy about the strike, but I do like the orange peel surfaces. >>
Does anyone else find the symbolism a little sad -- a flawed peace design representing a tragically flawed WW1 peace?