Black Cat - Complete Capped Bust Type Set (1807-1839) 的钱币相册

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1836 10C MS67+ PCGS #4528

CAC - A SUPERB rolling luster has vivid, smooth cartwheels that are totally uninterrupted when this coin is twirled in a light. The fields possess a bold satiny frost that is completely without flaw. There are zero breaks to the frost. The devices are incredibly sharp, from a precision strike from the JR-3 die combination. Both sides display a wonderful pastel iridescent toning. Shades of baby blue, clear gold, and rose come to life in a light.

1815 25C Browning 1 MS66+ PCGS #38942

CAC - Browning-1. The finest 1815 quarter graded by PCGS. Both obverse and reverse glow with satiny luster, cartwheeling over silver gray surfaces blushed with peach and tinted with violet, gold, and pastel blue. Every design element is fully struck, each obverse star shows its complete center, and nearly every border denticle is bold and rounded, showing softness only to the left of 12:00 on the obverse, right of 12:00 on the reverse. The eye appeal, encompassing the superlative luster, elegant color, and complete detail, is perhaps unsurpassable. The Jimmy Hayes 1815 Quarter Ex. Pogue.

1835 25C MS66 PCGS #5354

CAC - "The obverse shows a silver center framed with rings of amber-gold, aqua, jade, violet, and russet nearest the rims. The reverse is also silver in the centers, with russet-gold and cobalt-blue peripheral accents. ....... the eye appeal is simply off the charts." Ex "Col." E.H.R. Green/Newman.

1833 50C MS68 PCGS #6163

CAC - One of two MS68 coins for the Type at PCGS (4/24). "The overall color scheme is one of reddish-orange patina yielding to vivid electric-blue highlights at the denticles. The right obverse, however, displays mottled sea-green overtones intermingled with silver-tinged near-brilliance. The impression is expertly centered on the planchet with fully evident denticulation bordering devices that are sharply delineated in virtually all areas. Lustrous with a softly frosted texture, the surfaces are uncommonly blemish-free."

1837 50C GR-4 MS66 PCGS #531050

CAC - Superb deep gray obverse toning features rich olive and subtle golden-amber highlights, the latter of which become brighter at the peripheries. The reverse is lighter, with pleasing gold color and glimpses of bright blue near the periphery. With its attractive color, thorough luster, and fine surface frost, this piece offers excellent aesthetic appeal. The strike is sound, very bold at centers while yielding a bit on some peripheral elements, including star 7, the arrowheads, and the tops of the letters in CENTS. The quality of this piece, with its color, surfaces, strike, and technical preservation, is as nice as could be hoped for at this grade level.

1838 50C GR-1 MS66 PCGS #531080

CAC - "Impressive mint frost remains on delightfully toned surfaces, with gold and pale golden gray dappled across the obverse, intermingling with silvery brilliance, while the reverse shows a more typical tone of brilliant silver tinged with gold and pale rose. The cartwheel luster and visual appeal are both exceptional..." Ex. D. Brent Pogue Collection

1821 $2.50 BD-1 MS66+ PCGS #45516

CAC - Certified as the finest circulation strike PCGS has seen of this date. The deep maize-orange gold color doesn't just suggest originality, it trumpets it, joined by the deepening toning at the rims, the ancient spots here and there, and the warm reflectivity over all fields. Ex. Parmelee-Eliasberg-Pogue

1829 $2.50 MS67 PCGS #7669

CAC - This example is the finest certified 1829 quarter eagle by two grades and is the finest surviving mint state example from a meager mintage of just 3,403 coins. If fact, this arguably is the finest example for the type and the only MS67 that has earned CAC endorsement (11/24 nothing finer). This 1829 quarter eagle is noteworthy for its exceptionally bright luster and well frosted devices. Most survivors show some degree of prooflike fields, as the same dies were used to coin proofs of this year. This example is remarkable for its deeply mirrored fields and excellent cameo contrast. The strike is generally sharp, with good definition on Liberty's curls and on the eagle's feathers. Even the claws are sharp

1811 $5 BD-1 MS66 PCGS #507600

CAC - Ringed in rosy toning and adorned with a stunning layer of rich luster, this is one of the most magnificent early half eagles that was in the D. Brent Pogue Collection. Its surfaces present a freshness and originality rarely encountered on an early United States gold coin of any denomination. The obverse is surrounded in sedate coppery toning that blends seamlessly into the rich golden centers, retaining pale blue highlights around several stars. The reverse color is still more impressive, with deeper violet-red peripheries, more pastel blue, and deeper yellow gold. The luster surpasses that seen on nearly any other coin of this type and the fields are as close to free of marks as any coin of this type.

1820 $5 Curl Base 2, Large Letters MS66 PCGS #8127

CAC - A stunning example.

1831 $5 BD-2, Large D MS65+ PCGS #519949

CAC - The sole finest graded 1831 with the Large 5D on the reverse. "Boldly reflective, nearly fully Prooflike mint brilliance..... vivid golden surfaces with swirling cartwheels that sweep across the generally smooth, clean surfaces when rotated in a light; head on, the reflective flash overpowers the more satiny brilliance. The strike was exacting, with the details crisply impressed from the dies. The fields are virtually flawless." Ex - Pogue