Curious Reed on a Washington Quarter?
Now I know this coin is in bad shape. The 1968s. My question and curiosity is in the Reed? I bought this thinking by the appearance I first noticed to have no copper. Thinking it was silver of course. Didn't take my loupe to it at the time. So That's why I bought it. Among other reasons. One of the other reasons is the mint mark. Is the "s" considered to be the type 2? Check out the funky appearance on the reed with the lack of copper. When I did notice this at home with my scope I was surprised by the look! Anyone ever see this on quarters? Oh, by the way, my friendly shop owner gave me the coin free! What a gal. Thanks guy's! Warning: Many Pics! Oh! By the way, I did weigh it. It did weigh the 5.7 that clad weighs.
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Comments
You can see the copper in pics 7, 10, and 11. During the blanking process, the clad layer can get smeared over the copper. Have you ever noticed clad coins where the cladding appears to be thicker on one side and the copper core isn't centered? This is why. You confirmed it is the correct weight for a clad quarter, so it's just a normal proof. Yours appears to be a more extreme example of the metal smearing, but it's not an error.
You may have the rare funky reed quarter.
I'd get it slabbed.
Nice pics
Your pics are great👍
Nice pics of the reading. Good job
Pictures are very good ... that's ... Nice!
The Funky Cold Reededa.
Pipe organ variety !!!
Excellent pictures, particularly of the reeds....@Oldhoopster nailed it right away....I have seen this on clad quarters several times since I always check the edges. (Never know when a silver planchet might get tossed into the process) Cheers, RickO
Joeykoins, you're the king of odd-ball discoveries. Keep up the good work!