ozjohn Posted May 2 Posted May 2 An NGC MS 65 and PCGS MS 64 for comparison and my best 1920 ungraded florin. If I was given the choice of the PG coins I think the MS 64 is the better coin on the photographs and my one ain't too bad either. I'll be interested to see how much these two coins sell for. 1 Quote
PWA 1967 Posted May 2 Posted May 2 I had an NGC MS65 1920 Florin that was superb and struggle to find a better one. 2 Quote
Paddy Posted May 2 Posted May 2 1 hour ago, ozjohn said: An NGC MS 65 and PCGS MS 64 for comparison and my best 1920 ungraded florin. If I was given the choice of the PG coins I think the MS 64 is the better coin on the photographs and my one ain't too bad either. I'll be interested to see how much these two coins sell for. I am not greatly into this Grading Mularkey but I would say the NGC 65 is way over graded - far too much loss of detail on the bust. I would say the other two are very similar and I would choose your ungraded one over the PCGS 64. 2 Quote
VickySilver Posted May 2 Posted May 2 Hiya Paddy. Love the better 1920 transition year shillings, florins and half crowns. Although only pictures, you will see with some frequency the TPGs to give a "technical" grade - that is the level of wear and lustre, etc. giving the grade. The strike IMHO is not valued enough and so I believe this to be the rationale for the higher grade on the first coin. Yours appears to have a wonderful strike with excellent hair & mustache, etc. detail. To be fair the first coin appears a bit overexposed photographically but the details do appear a bit flatter. I was thrilled to some years ago get the specimen proof "duck tailed" 1920 florin and will post a picture later today in case you might be interested. 1 Quote
ozjohn Posted May 2 Author Posted May 2 9 hours ago, VickySilver said: Hiya Paddy. Love the better 1920 transition year shillings, florins and half crowns. Although only pictures, you will see with some frequency the TPGs to give a "technical" grade - that is the level of wear and lustre, etc. giving the grade. The strike IMHO is not valued enough and so I believe this to be the rationale for the higher grade on the first coin. Yours appears to have a wonderful strike with excellent hair & mustache, etc. detail. To be fair the first coin appears a bit overexposed photographically but the details do appear a bit flatter. I was thrilled to some years ago get the specimen proof "duck tailed" 1920 florin and will post a picture later today in case you might be interested. A previously discussed buy the coin not the "grade" Having said that the aim of PGs should be to provide consistency. Strike quality is one of the points in accessing the higher grades and the the upper shield on the MS 65 graded coin should have downgraded this coin. Quote
Peckris 2 Posted May 2 Posted May 2 13 hours ago, ozjohn said: An NGC MS 65 and PCGS MS 64 for comparison and my best 1920 ungraded florin. If I was given the choice of the PG coins I think the MS 64 is the better coin on the photographs and my one ain't too bad either. I'll be interested to see how much these two coins sell for. I think I'd concur about the MS64 - though it is slightly hard to tell from small pictures. (Perhaps next time you could just screenshot the coin without the surrounding stuff?) Quote
ozjohn Posted May 3 Author Posted May 3 On 5/2/2025 at 6:01 PM, PWA 1967 said: I had an NGC MS65 1920 Florin that was superb and struggle to find a better one. Very nice coin. 2 Quote
VickySilver Posted August 10 Posted August 10 Ah never did post this specimen/proof 1920 florin gotten from Mark R. many years ago with the “ducktailed” milling, possibly unique. Sorry about the poor photos from his list: 3 Quote
ozjohn Posted August 11 Author Posted August 11 Have trouble is accepting a grade of MS 64 for this coin. Quote
ozjohn Posted August 11 Author Posted August 11 (edited) A light strike perhaps? For the most part 1913 half crowns are much better than the ones minted in WW1. Edited August 11 by ozjohn typo Quote
VickySilver Posted August 11 Posted August 11 Yes, a soft strike and the surfaces actually not showing much wear. Quote
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