tough to tell. Is that the true toning? I don't see much chatter except in the reverse field in front of the left rear leg and a possible spot directly in front of the nose. Obverse looks clean except the spot in front of the indian's mouth. If these are not carbon spots or apparent digs or gouges I'd say it's in the 66-7 range.
mojo
"I am the wilderness that is lost in man." -Jim Morrison- Mr. Mojorizn
I think the area above the front leg could be a little stronger--remember, 1938-Ds are the strongest strikes of the series, so a weak strike affects these coins more than any other date.
<< <i>Shamika Im not a buff collector, so educate me. were could the strike improve? >>
Look at the images below. The areas that I've circled show five locations that are very well struck, but not very well struck on the nickle that is the subject of this post.
The hair just above the Indian's braid, the feather at the 9:00 position, and the area on the Buffalo's shoulder instantly label this coin as being short of a full strike.
1938-D Buffalos are known for their outstanding strikes. In fact, finding a softly struck 1938-D would almost be an anomoly.
Comments
mojo
-Jim Morrison-
Mr. Mojorizn
my blog:www.numistories.com
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
Im not a buff collector,so educate me,were could the strike improve?
Al
Jeremy
<< <i>Shamika
Im not a buff collector, so educate me. were could the strike improve? >>
Look at the images below. The areas that I've circled show five locations that are very well struck, but not very well struck on the nickle that is the subject of this post.
The hair just above the Indian's braid, the feather at the 9:00 position, and the area on the Buffalo's shoulder instantly label this coin as being short of a full strike.
1938-D Buffalos are known for their outstanding strikes. In fact, finding a softly struck 1938-D would almost be an anomoly.
2 Cam-Slams!
1 Russ POTD!
Thanks for taking the time to post this,I appreciate it,as most will.
Al