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The 1862 plain-edge proof Gothic florin (2849 in Bull, who records it as "not traced") sold for $21,600 (including buyer's premium) at Heritage yesterday. At least we know that it exists now.

1862P_O_small.jpg.0e2e350e56ffa51dff42889f6c6784ec.jpg1862P_R_small.jpg.a8f67af50b4082a603dbb73dd10728c1.jpg

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7 hours ago, david.bordeaux said:

The 1862 plain-edge proof Gothic florin (2849 in Bull, who records it as "not traced") sold for $21,600 (including buyer's premium) at Heritage yesterday. At least we know that it exists now.

1862P_O_small.jpg.0e2e350e56ffa51dff42889f6c6784ec.jpg1862P_R_small.jpg.a8f67af50b4082a603dbb73dd10728c1.jpg

Total beauty

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1 hour ago, copper123 said:

Total beauty

It is…but it’s totally unnecessary I think to see the tone carelessly removed from the high spots, especially for a coin of such prestige!

I see it all the time on lesser coins, where I can imagine someone has ‘pulled’ a coin across a surface to pick it up, rather than ‘hook’ it up (more difficult to do with hammered, of course).

I discovered, quite by accident, that one of the worst offenders is the grey ‘neutral’ boards that come with cameras nowadays, they are comparable to 1000 grit sandpaper when a coin is dragged off it. Many coins are horribly scarred this way (I attach an example).

IMG_3800.jpeg

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That's the main reason I keep my coins in quadrums - in order to protect them from friction and dust. I do admit that quadrums are not so appropriate for hammered...

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