Interesting coin. Not sure what the best label might be. It is not a widget. Doesn't look like Dreck. No, this is a blow-your-hair right off your head coin.
Interesting coin. Not sure what the best label might be. It is not a widget. Doesn't look like Dreck. No, this is a blow-your-hair right off your head coin.
This coin is unbelievably difficult to find in any semblance of originality with good surfaces. Doug had a tough time letting go of this girl.
It looks like the PC55 that sold in a Heritage auction in September 2013 for $32.9K but it has certain spots that don't match this coin. Almost makes me think it came from a similar source. But then you look at the NGC coin in Heritage's September 2013 auction, there it is... in NGC53... same price, same auction.... hmmm. Both auction comments below:
"1901-S 25C AU55 PCGS. This Choice AU key-date Barber quarter will improve eight of the top 10 PCGS Registry sets for that series. An impressive example, this issue is rarely seen in AU grades. In fact, it is rarely seen in grades better than VG. PCGS has certified 707 examples of the 1901-S quarter, including 623 pieces that grade from Poor-1 to VG10, and only 84 examples in Fine or better grades.
This splendid example has brilliant and untoned silver surfaces with a few wispy hairlines on the obverse. Both sides are fully lustrous with a trace of high point wear. Population: 4 in 55, 31 finer (8/13).(Registry values: N4719) (NGC ID# 23YR, PCGS# 5630)"
"1901-S 25C AU53 NGC. While the 1901-S quarter is not the lowest-mintage issue among the triumvirate of San Francisco key dates (the 1913-S saw just 40,000 examples struck), it is the least available in better circulated and Mint State grades, as few 1901-S pieces were saved at the time of release and collectors made an effort to save the 1913-S. This AU53 example has considerable remaining luster on pearl-gray surfaces that have aspects of gold, orange, and near-rose at the margins and in the protected parts of the fields. Light marks are as expected for the amount of commerce seen. Census: 1 in 53, 18 finer (8/13).(Registry values: N4719) (NGC ID# 23YR, PCGS# 5630)"
Yes, that '01 S Quarter is sweet- and tough! I believe the coin is in an NGC holder in the photo. I suspect it's an AU 53 sold at a Heritage Auction in September 2013:
@JeffMTampa said:
Yes, that '01 S Quarter is sweet- and tough! I believe the coin is in an NGC holder in the photo. I suspect it's an AU 53 sold at a Heritage Auction in September 2013:
@JeffMTampa said:
Yes, that '01 S Quarter is sweet- and tough! I believe the coin is in an NGC holder in the photo. I suspect it's an AU 53 sold at a Heritage Auction in September 2013:
I've been looking for over 20 years and it's still the only 01-S in AU that I'd care to own (not that there are very many to choose from). It's now resting very comfortably in a PC50 holder. Why our hosts decided to knock off 3 points on the cross is just another one of those mysteries.
Vern l It's not having what you want, it's wanting what you've got.
Does anyone know if they closed the New Orleans Mint and put a Jazz Museum in there instead? @JeffMTampa, you still have those pictures of the Half Dollars in a Capital Plastics holder from the display? Kind of like this one... but it doesn't show the Barber halves... and here I was thinking about planning a trip down there later this year. Bummer?
If I was to go, even though this doesn't exist from the coin displays, it would have been nice to see something like this:
(But with coins obviously)
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
I was there last fall. The 2nd Floor is the Jazz Museum, the 1st Floor is still the Mint Museum. They still have all the coins on display (including a set of O mint Barber Halves). It's definitely worth a visit if in New Orleans.
After seeing the Barber Halves in the New Orleans Mint capital plastics display, I would modify the mocked-up Barber Quarter version to look more like this:
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
@sedulous said:
Something to warm you up on this cold Wednesday... speaking of New Orleans quarters... here is a 1902-O Barber Quarter graded PC40...
T
That coin is not a XF 40- it should be a45 minimum, maybe a 50. What am I missing?
The way my fortunes have been lately, a lot of my submissions to our hosts have been more on the conservative side. Thanks for all of your thoughts. Tim
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
I'm anticipating the arrival of a new lady Liberty which is on her way to my humble abode. 1900 O Reverse of '01-This one has the look I really go for based on pics from a seller with whom I am both comfortable and confident.
I'm anticipating the arrival of a new lady Liberty which is on her way to my humble abode. 1900 O Reverse of '01-This one has the look I really go for based on pics from a seller with whom I am both comfortable and confident.
I have completed a collection of Barber Quarters from the New Orleans Mint inside the mocked-up holder. These are all coins coming out of my collection. The Type II Reverse is a '92-O. The Type III Reverse is an '01-O. I wanted to see what it would look like with the set filled. I hope you like it!
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
@sedulous Beautiful collection and I really like how you've laid it out with the virtual Capitol holder. Very consistent look to that part of your quarter set and yet the individual coins have such a wide range in tone - well done all around!
Another question. A friend of mine asked me to help him secure more 90% silver and I have been getting him worn Barber material at about 15x face value. It is close to $16 per oz. now. Do any of you grab or hold onto 90% Barber material primarily for silver investing (beyond collecting)?
T
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
My latest pickup would represent a terrible silver investment, but she sure is pretty...
This dime was already 80 years old when Saturday Night Fever was released, but you'd never know. Although my rule has been for MS62 to be the uppermost limit for the set I'm building, I couldn't resist making an exception for this stunning 63. What a dime!
Scodol
I would be concerned with what I call “burn spots” on both sides of the coin from what I believe was a previous dipping of the coin. I’m not certain the coin is stable. Hopefully I’m wrong, wouldn’t be the first time
Jim
@No Headlights said:
Scodol
I would be concerned with what I call “burn spots” on both sides of the coin from what I believe was a previous dipping of the coin. I’m not certain the coin is stable. Hopefully I’m wrong, wouldn’t be the first time
Jim
Thanks for the post, Jim. I know what you mean about the spots, and they were/are a point of concern here as well. I'm sure others on the Forum are far more knowledgeable than I am about whether the reaction causing the spots is still active or whether being in a (hopefully) inert environment has stopped the progression, and you may be right about it having been dipped at some point.
What I do know is that it's in an OGH (1993-1998) so it has been housed in the same holder for 20-25 years. I was also able to find a previous auction record for it from 2004, and while the photos taken were not very good it does appear that the spots were present then and have not grown much, if at all, since that time. I showed the coin to a trusted dealer at the Long Beach show, and it was his opinion that the spots were not active. It doesn't look dipped to me when I view it in hand, although I suspect I still have a fairly amateur eye for making those determinations 100% of the time.
If nothing else, the placement of the spots is fortunate in that they aren't unduly distracting (at least to me). I'll be keeping an eye on them, but I figure on getting a few years of enjoyment out of it either way.
The feedback is much appreciated, and if anyone else has a thought on it I'd love to get your perspective(s) as well.
Finding a nice-looking, original and problem-free 1897-O has been a real challenge here (especially in PC58 - pop 4!), but I finally lucked out in locating this specimen. The pics do this coin no justice, and in hand it reveals iridescent blue, red, yellow and green tones.
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
@sedulous said:
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
@sedulous I'm not sure why your 97-O wouldn't sticker, either. Hard to tell what they are looking for sometimes, especially when they decline on a nicely-toned original and truly scarce issue. I know less about the XF market than the AU market, but I'd bet there hasn't been another that has surfaced (much less looking like that) since you found yours in 2017. Beautiful coin and nice find!
@sedulous said:
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
@sedulous said:
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
@sedulous I'm not sure why your 97-O wouldn't sticker, either. Hard to tell what they are looking for sometimes, especially when they decline on a nicely-toned original and truly scarce issue. I know less about the XF market than the AU market, but I'd bet there hasn't been another that has surfaced (much less looking like that) since you found yours in 2017. Beautiful coin and nice find!
@sedulous said:
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
@sedulous said:
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
@sedulous I'm not sure why your 97-O wouldn't sticker, either. Hard to tell what they are looking for sometimes, especially when they decline on a nicely-toned original and truly scarce issue. I know less about the XF market than the AU market, but I'd bet there hasn't been another that has surfaced (much less looking like that) since you found yours in 2017. Beautiful coin and nice find!
Probably the hit on the hair under LIBERTY
Yeah, you may be right. I'll bet they also don't like the hit on that top laurel wreath leaf either. Thanks for the feedback.
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
@sedulous said:
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
@sedulous said:
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
@sedulous I'm not sure why your 97-O wouldn't sticker, either. Hard to tell what they are looking for sometimes, especially when they decline on a nicely-toned original and truly scarce issue. I know less about the XF market than the AU market, but I'd bet there hasn't been another that has surfaced (much less looking like that) since you found yours in 2017. Beautiful coin and nice find!
Probably the hit on the hair under LIBERTY
Yeah, you may be right. I'll bet they also don't like the hit on that top laurel wreath leaf either. Thanks for the feedback.
Anyone care to comment on the dime market lately? Up, down, flat? I was hoping to pick up a few examples for my sets soon. Are there grades that are doing better or worse?
@erwindoc said:
Anyone care to comment on the dime market lately? Up, down, flat? I was hoping to pick up a few examples for my sets soon. Are there grades that are doing better or worse?
I only started assembling a dime set in 2016 so my frame of reference is limited, but I think depending on what part of the market you are looking at there is a case to be made for all three scenarios.
Although most dealers I've talked to tend to characterize the market as down or flat overall, quality scarce or semi-key dates and pretty common date dimes move fast, and they all can command decent (but not exorbitant) premiums. It's difficult to say whether this is more a function of supply or demand, since to my knowledge there has not been a major collection to go on the market (at least in AU range where I do most of my collecting) since the Stack's Bowers auction at the 2016 ANA, but individual or small pockets of PQ specimens tend to garner a fair bit of attention and attract multiple competitive bidders. The 1898 in MS63 I posted here recently was only moderately competitive when it was auctioned on eBay, but at one point it had no less than 47 'official' watchers. That said, any gems that are priced at more than 30-50% over list tend to stick around for awhile unless they are truly unique, suggesting that aggregate demand for quality coins does appear to have its limits. I rarely see dealers offering nice coins at fair prices (i.e. at list or with modest premiums) who keep those specimens in their inventory for more than a few days. When premium coins are offered at auction, there always seem to be 2-3 other bidders who are neck and neck until premium levels are reached.
Widgets are a different story. For these, list price already represents a bit of a premium, but those that are priced at 5-10% below list typically seem to move in a two week to one month timeframe. I track certified populations and growth in AU range, and note that there have been several predominantly common date hoards (or possibly one hoard that has been rolled out in phases) that has/have come onto the market over the last year and a half (four groups totaling around 400 coins, all NGC, and primarily 53s and 55s). Particularly with these common dates, there is currently a glut that outpaces demand, and someone building a date set of middling quality could do so while paying 15-20% below list (at least for common dates) if they are diligent and patient.
I'm not sure if dreck has ever been up, but currently there appears to be very little interest whatsoever in poor quality or problem dimes. Even at reduced prices these sit on eBay for an eternity or go for as low as 40-50% of list price at auction. Most of these coins seem like they are simply lingering until the next time silver reaches an all-time high.
For what it's worth, that's my ten cents...I hope others will weigh in - I'd be very interested to get a sense of the broader dime market from anyone collecting in under XF45 or over MS62 range.
Comments
Interesting coin. Not sure what the best label might be. It is not a widget. Doesn't look like Dreck. No, this is a blow-your-hair right off your head coin.
I like it too! AU55??
This coin is unbelievably difficult to find in any semblance of originality with good surfaces. Doug had a tough time letting go of this girl.
It looks like the PC55 that sold in a Heritage auction in September 2013 for $32.9K but it has certain spots that don't match this coin. Almost makes me think it came from a similar source. But then you look at the NGC coin in Heritage's September 2013 auction, there it is... in NGC53... same price, same auction.... hmmm. Both auction comments below:
"1901-S 25C AU55 PCGS. This Choice AU key-date Barber quarter will improve eight of the top 10 PCGS Registry sets for that series. An impressive example, this issue is rarely seen in AU grades. In fact, it is rarely seen in grades better than VG. PCGS has certified 707 examples of the 1901-S quarter, including 623 pieces that grade from Poor-1 to VG10, and only 84 examples in Fine or better grades.
This splendid example has brilliant and untoned silver surfaces with a few wispy hairlines on the obverse. Both sides are fully lustrous with a trace of high point wear. Population: 4 in 55, 31 finer (8/13).(Registry values: N4719) (NGC ID# 23YR, PCGS# 5630)"
https://coins.ha.com/itm/barber-quarters/1901-s-25c-au55-pcgs/a/1189-6376.s?hdnJumpToLot=1&x=0&y=0
"1901-S 25C AU53 NGC. While the 1901-S quarter is not the lowest-mintage issue among the triumvirate of San Francisco key dates (the 1913-S saw just 40,000 examples struck), it is the least available in better circulated and Mint State grades, as few 1901-S pieces were saved at the time of release and collectors made an effort to save the 1913-S. This AU53 example has considerable remaining luster on pearl-gray surfaces that have aspects of gold, orange, and near-rose at the margins and in the protected parts of the fields. Light marks are as expected for the amount of commerce seen. Census: 1 in 53, 18 finer (8/13).(Registry values: N4719) (NGC ID# 23YR, PCGS# 5630)"
https://coins.ha.com/itm/barber-quarters/1901-s-25c-au53-ngc/a/1189-6375.s?hdnJumpToLot=1&x=0&y=0
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Yes, that '01 S Quarter is sweet- and tough! I believe the coin is in an NGC holder in the photo. I suspect it's an AU 53 sold at a Heritage Auction in September 2013:
https://coins.ha.com/itm/barber-quarters/1901-s-25c-au53-ngc/a/1189-6375.s?hdnJumpToLot=1&x=0&y=0
Yep, Same link I found. It is nice!
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Now you found it!!
Now living in sunny Florida
Toughest 20th century coin. Regular issue of course
I've been looking for over 20 years and it's still the only 01-S in AU that I'd care to own (not that there are very many to choose from). It's now resting very comfortably in a PC50 holder. Why our hosts decided to knock off 3 points on the cross is just another one of those mysteries.
l
It's not having what you want, it's wanting what you've got.
Does anyone know if they closed the New Orleans Mint and put a Jazz Museum in there instead? @JeffMTampa, you still have those pictures of the Half Dollars in a Capital Plastics holder from the display? Kind of like this one... but it doesn't show the Barber halves... and here I was thinking about planning a trip down there later this year. Bummer?
If I was to go, even though this doesn't exist from the coin displays, it would have been nice to see something like this:
(But with coins obviously)
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
I was there last fall. The 2nd Floor is the Jazz Museum, the 1st Floor is still the Mint Museum. They still have all the coins on display (including a set of O mint Barber Halves). It's definitely worth a visit if in New Orleans.
Ok, Thanks... that is great news. Here are the halves...
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
After seeing the Barber Halves in the New Orleans Mint capital plastics display, I would modify the mocked-up Barber Quarter version to look more like this:
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Something to warm you up on this cold Wednesday... speaking of New Orleans quarters... here is a 1902-O Barber Quarter graded PC40...
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Nice. Well struck also, which for a 02-O isn’t always the case
That coin is not a XF 40- it should be a45 minimum, maybe a 50. What am I missing?
Nice coin and a "Nicer"date!!!
I could see that as a EF 45
Jeff!
I like it as a strong 40. But i’m Old school on grading. But without full wing tips on the right wing I can’t see it as a 45. JMHO
The way my fortunes have been lately, a lot of my submissions to our hosts have been more on the conservative side. Thanks for all of your thoughts. Tim
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
I'm anticipating the arrival of a new lady Liberty which is on her way to my humble abode. 1900 O Reverse of '01-This one has the look I really go for based on pics from a seller with whom I am both comfortable and confident.
Very > @jedm said:
Very nice
Dave Kahn is a great dealer
Here is my close-to-similarly-graded '00-O in NGC F-15...
@jedm... that is fantastic quality at the grade level you have there. Nice peripheral darker gray tone - desirable!
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
I have completed a collection of Barber Quarters from the New Orleans Mint inside the mocked-up holder. These are all coins coming out of my collection. The Type II Reverse is a '92-O. The Type III Reverse is an '01-O. I wanted to see what it would look like with the set filled. I hope you like it!
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Looks great! I always liked the look of the Capitol holders, even if it's a virtual one.
Very nice!
@sedulous Beautiful collection and I really like how you've laid it out with the virtual Capitol holder. Very consistent look to that part of your quarter set and yet the individual coins have such a wide range in tone - well done all around!
To move the thread along, an 1898-O quarter... beautiful look with solid wear and tone at PC25:
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Another question. A friend of mine asked me to help him secure more 90% silver and I have been getting him worn Barber material at about 15x face value. It is close to $16 per oz. now. Do any of you grab or hold onto 90% Barber material primarily for silver investing (beyond collecting)?
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
My latest pickup would represent a terrible silver investment, but she sure is pretty...
This dime was already 80 years old when Saturday Night Fever was released, but you'd never know. Although my rule has been for MS62 to be the uppermost limit for the set I'm building, I couldn't resist making an exception for this stunning 63. What a dime!
Scodol
I would be concerned with what I call “burn spots” on both sides of the coin from what I believe was a previous dipping of the coin. I’m not certain the coin is stable. Hopefully I’m wrong, wouldn’t be the first time
Jim
Thanks for the post, Jim. I know what you mean about the spots, and they were/are a point of concern here as well. I'm sure others on the Forum are far more knowledgeable than I am about whether the reaction causing the spots is still active or whether being in a (hopefully) inert environment has stopped the progression, and you may be right about it having been dipped at some point.
What I do know is that it's in an OGH (1993-1998) so it has been housed in the same holder for 20-25 years. I was also able to find a previous auction record for it from 2004, and while the photos taken were not very good it does appear that the spots were present then and have not grown much, if at all, since that time. I showed the coin to a trusted dealer at the Long Beach show, and it was his opinion that the spots were not active. It doesn't look dipped to me when I view it in hand, although I suspect I still have a fairly amateur eye for making those determinations 100% of the time.
If nothing else, the placement of the spots is fortunate in that they aren't unduly distracting (at least to me). I'll be keeping an eye on them, but I figure on getting a few years of enjoyment out of it either way.
The feedback is much appreciated, and if anyone else has a thought on it I'd love to get your perspective(s) as well.
Scott
I’m encouraged to hear it’s in an old holder. Plus getting a second opinion was a great decision
@scodal I like it. Very pretty dime.
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Lots of nice barbers posted since I was last here. What a great hobby.
l
It's not having what you want, it's wanting what you've got.
Very nice Barbers!
Page 4 is no place for the Megathread...
Here is another new pickup:
Finding a nice-looking, original and problem-free 1897-O has been a real challenge here (especially in PC58 - pop 4!), but I finally lucked out in locating this specimen. The pics do this coin no justice, and in hand it reveals iridescent blue, red, yellow and green tones.
What a beauty!! Congratulations
Here is the 1897-O dime I obtained in 2017 in PC45. I sent it in for CAC but it did not green bean. I am not sure why. @scodal I really like your 58. Nice.
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
@sedulous I'm not sure why your 97-O wouldn't sticker, either. Hard to tell what they are looking for sometimes, especially when they decline on a nicely-toned original and truly scarce issue. I know less about the XF market than the AU market, but I'd bet there hasn't been another that has surfaced (much less looking like that) since you found yours in 2017. Beautiful coin and nice find!
Probably the hit on the hair under LIBERTY
BHNC #203
Yeah, you may be right. I'll bet they also don't like the hit on that top laurel wreath leaf either. Thanks for the feedback.
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
agreed
BHNC #203
Anyone care to comment on the dime market lately? Up, down, flat? I was hoping to pick up a few examples for my sets soon. Are there grades that are doing better or worse?
I only started assembling a dime set in 2016 so my frame of reference is limited, but I think depending on what part of the market you are looking at there is a case to be made for all three scenarios.
Although most dealers I've talked to tend to characterize the market as down or flat overall, quality scarce or semi-key dates and pretty common date dimes move fast, and they all can command decent (but not exorbitant) premiums. It's difficult to say whether this is more a function of supply or demand, since to my knowledge there has not been a major collection to go on the market (at least in AU range where I do most of my collecting) since the Stack's Bowers auction at the 2016 ANA, but individual or small pockets of PQ specimens tend to garner a fair bit of attention and attract multiple competitive bidders. The 1898 in MS63 I posted here recently was only moderately competitive when it was auctioned on eBay, but at one point it had no less than 47 'official' watchers. That said, any gems that are priced at more than 30-50% over list tend to stick around for awhile unless they are truly unique, suggesting that aggregate demand for quality coins does appear to have its limits. I rarely see dealers offering nice coins at fair prices (i.e. at list or with modest premiums) who keep those specimens in their inventory for more than a few days. When premium coins are offered at auction, there always seem to be 2-3 other bidders who are neck and neck until premium levels are reached.
Widgets are a different story. For these, list price already represents a bit of a premium, but those that are priced at 5-10% below list typically seem to move in a two week to one month timeframe. I track certified populations and growth in AU range, and note that there have been several predominantly common date hoards (or possibly one hoard that has been rolled out in phases) that has/have come onto the market over the last year and a half (four groups totaling around 400 coins, all NGC, and primarily 53s and 55s). Particularly with these common dates, there is currently a glut that outpaces demand, and someone building a date set of middling quality could do so while paying 15-20% below list (at least for common dates) if they are diligent and patient.
I'm not sure if dreck has ever been up, but currently there appears to be very little interest whatsoever in poor quality or problem dimes. Even at reduced prices these sit on eBay for an eternity or go for as low as 40-50% of list price at auction. Most of these coins seem like they are simply lingering until the next time silver reaches an all-time high.
For what it's worth, that's my ten cents...I hope others will weigh in - I'd be very interested to get a sense of the broader dime market from anyone collecting in under XF45 or over MS62 range.
scodal - nice 97-O newp. Very tough IMO.
Tim - sometimes it's just the luck of the draw.
erwindoc - nice, original better date dimes haven't been down in the past 25 years, if one can find one to buy, in my experience.
Pics for this PM, I've been looking for early mint-marked dimes that look like this for years. Not many come along that are available for sale, PC58:
l
It's not having what you want, it's wanting what you've got.
@barberkeys That's a really nice 92-S with a beautiful original look. Well done on the new pickup!
Vern, The quality and rarity of that '92-S is incredible. Never seen a dime like that before up for sale in my recent memory.
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.
Very nice Barbers!
very nice!
I only have one that high a grade, but raw.
It was a 58 that I picked up back in 2001. When you could still find 58's.
BHNC #203
Can you show us a pic?
A Barber Quartet is made up of Nickels, Dimes, Quarters, and Halves.