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New Cherrypickers' Guide: 38 More Pgs,150 New Vars, 43 Lincs

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koinpro's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  1:01 pm Show Profile   Bookmark this topic Add koinpro to your friends list Get a Link to this Message Number of Subscribers
Most of the Lincolns in here were already assigned numbers by me before I decided to pass on editing this edition (due to health -- now resolved). This edition is a huge upgrade from the previous edition!

(Atlanta, Georgia) — Whitman Publishing announces the release of a new, expanded, and updated 25th-anniversary volume of the CherryPickers' Guide to Rare Die Varieties of United States coins. The popular award-winning series shows collectors how to find valuable coins hidden in pocket change and dealers' inventories. The new sixth edition, volume I, covers Half Cents, Large Cents, small cents, two-cent and three-cent pieces, and nickels. It will be available on September 29, 2015, online, including at http://www.Whitman.com and from booksellers, hobby shops, and coin dealers nationwide, for $39.95. The book can also be borrowed for free as a benefit of membership in the American Numismatic Association, through the Dwight N. Manley Numismatic Library.

Longtime die-variety specialist Mike Ellis joined the Cherrypickers' team as editor of the new volume, working with the book's original creators, Bill Fivaz and J.T. Stanton.

"Cherrypicking" involves examining coins to find those that look common at first glance, but have unusual characteristics (like doubled and tripled dies, overdates, and repunched mintmarks) that make them rare and valuable. An example is the 1873 Indian Head cent with a doubled obverse (pictured on the book's cover). The normal coin can be bought for about $125 in circulated condition, while the doubled-die variety in the same grade is worth $2,000.

The CherryPickers' Guide includes 1,100 close-up photographs plus text descriptions to guide the reader, as well as market information and values in multiple grades, for more than 680 varieties. Appendices include essays on types of doubling, how to examine your coins, Proof set varieties, collector clubs, recommended reading, and other beginner and advanced topics.

The new volume is 48 pages longer than the fifth edition and features 150 new varieties. " Lincoln Cent collectors are the biggest winners with the latest CherryPickers' Guide, with 43 new varieties, including many moderns," said Whitman publisher Dennis Tucker. "Also, the Buffalo nickel and Jefferson nickel chapters have each nearly doubled, with 31 and 34 new varieties, respectively." Other series that include more than 10 new entries include two-cent pieces, Shield nickels, and Indian Head cents. There are additions to the Flying Eagle cent and Liberty Head nickel series, as well.

Ellis and Fivaz coordinated the efforts of more than 15 die-variety specialists from around the country, updating retail prices, rarity ratings, and various market factors for each coin. The new book gives special attention to the Two Feather varieties of Buffalo nickels, the doubled dies of the 2009 Lincoln Bicentennial cents, and various Close AM and Wide AM cent varieties.

The front of each chapter conveniently lists new entries, as well as entries scheduled to be removed from future coin-by-coin listings, and old entries that have been debunked by modern research.

The CherryPickers' Guide can be pre-ordered online before its September 2015 rollout, including at http://www.Whitman.com.
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Rackster's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  1:56 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Rackster to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Rest in Peace
dave700x's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  2:08 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add dave700x to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Very nice synopsis, koinpro.
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Cascade's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  2:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Cascade to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Glad to hear your health issues have been "resolved" and you're feelin better now ken
Edited by Cascade
08/12/2015 2:21 pm
Rest in Peace
moxking's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  2:45 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add moxking to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Definitely on my must buy list.
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bpoc1's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  3:46 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add bpoc1 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Ken, thanks for posting this information.
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cherrypickersaddict's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  4:03 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cherrypickersaddict to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
So do the additions make this an essential upgrade from 5th edition?
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Cascade's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  4:16 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Cascade to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I would say it's your handle that makes it a must have essential for you
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koinpro's Avatar
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 Posted 08/12/2015  5:28 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add koinpro to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I agree with Cascade. This will be a huge upgrade!
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cherrypickersaddict's Avatar
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 Posted 08/14/2015  11:21 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cherrypickersaddict to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Cant wait!
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Breavercreekcoins's Avatar
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 Posted 08/16/2015  11:14 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Breavercreekcoins to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Will this version be available in pdf form?
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BJ Neff's Avatar
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 Posted 08/17/2015  9:07 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BJ Neff to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Once again the CPG has totally ignored the die variety called trail dies. It seems that some people want to avoid this recognized die variety even though some of the trail dies can be seen without magnification (the biggy when ranking doubled dies) and the fact that these anomalies are still being produced by the U. S. Mint (and I presume other world mints as well).

I ask the experts in the field of variety dies "why this disdain for an obvious anomaly?". Is it because we do not fully understand what causes the lines (trails) to be produced? Or is it for some other reason?

Robert (BJ)_Neff
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cwb's Avatar
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 Posted 08/17/2015  9:40 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add cwb to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
BJ Neff
I would like to discuss trail dies with you. Could you email me at lincolncentsonline@gmail.com
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koinpro's Avatar
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 Posted 08/18/2015  08:49 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add koinpro to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
BJ, one of the criteria for listing a coin in CPG is that it have significant value over the price of a normal coin. For example, you will see that the 1979-S Proof SBA with Ty-II Mintmark is included while the cents through half dollars are not. To the best of my knowledge, while the Trail Dies have proven to be collectible, none have seen truly significant price advances. For cents, you are looking at a coin that may garner a dollar or two over normal value just like a 1979-S Ty-II cent may fetch. I was at the ANA and found that the money changing machine at the US Mint was dispensing two different Trail Dies for the 2015-D VA quarter. I purchased about $40 worth of them of which about 20% are from one of these two dies. Cool find but not of great enough value for me to run over and buy $1000 worth to get more. Bottom line is I like finding them just like I like finding a BIE cent but I don't see them ever bringing in big money. The interest is just not there on the retail end. If the "value" is not there it's hard to justify using a page for one or two in CPG.
Edited by koinpro
08/18/2015 08:50 am
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BJ Neff's Avatar
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 Posted 08/18/2015  1:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add BJ Neff to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I am not convinced of the criteria that you have stated. There are examples in all the CPGs where variety coins are valued just 2 to 3 times over the base value for that coin. Is that significant value?

We must remember that trails have been around since 1869 ( US coins since 1921), they are found on all denominations of US coins and they are still being made.

Of course, when you find a statement in a book "Although these types of varieties do NOT bring large premiums", you can only wonder why trail dies are not in the league with doubled dies and RPMs as they should be

Robert (BJ) Neff
Edited by BJ Neff
08/18/2015 1:10 pm
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koinpro's Avatar
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 Posted 08/18/2015  2:06 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add koinpro to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
BJ,

It's all relative. A current one-cent piece that is worth one-cent without the Trails and sells on ebay for $1 with Trails is worth 100 times face value with the Trails. The percentage is high but the total is low. But a coin that is normally worth $100 without a variety but $300 with a given variety has a low percentage over the normal value (comparatively speaking) that still adds up to a lot of bucks profit.

Also, the editors of CPG are now removing low interest, i.e., what are often low value coins from the main listings and placing them in an Appendix to make room for "better" varieties. As such, low value or low interest varieties now have even less of a chance of getting in due to space constraints of which nothing can be done.

On statements in books such as: "Although these types of varieties do NOT bring large premiums", authors must be honest and state the facts so that readers are not misled. For now Trails don't bring bring big money (as I would have stated it if I wrote such a statement).

Keep in mind that it took many of our highly sought after RPMs and DDs decades to catch on. When I got started I remember buying rolls of BU 1956-D/D RPM#1 and others similar for $2 a coin from the Kramer estate sold by Rich Schemmer. I have a letter from Jim Johnson from 1971 telling a collector that his 1971-S Kennedy half dollar DDO (what was later listed as CONECA DDO-006/FS-106) was too minor to be of interest to collectors (as it was back then). The bottom line is "new" variety types do not catch on overnight!

Many of the modern varieties types that are popular today weren't until I spend tens of thousands of dollars promoting them in quarter to full page ads week after week for years in Coin World, Numismatic News and COINage Magazine in the mid to late 1980s.

For all practical purposes those ads did more to kick start the collecting of modern varieties then any book or club ever did.
Edited by koinpro
08/18/2015 9:11 pm
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