This type of coin, issued by a private mint, has no numismatic value to U.S. coin collectors. Their value is based only upon the worth of the metals used to produce them plus whatever value an individual may be willing to pay to own them.
Stuff that is put out by the Franklin Mint does not have a numismatic collectible value. But if the coins are struck in silver it will have a bullion value
$200
Anything from the Franklin mint is overpriced and not worth nearly as much as their sales prices. The only coins from Franklin worth anything are those made with silver.
No, it was not a complete commercial failure.
No, it was not a complete commercial failure.
8th grade
No, it was not a complete commercial failure.
Franklin Byrom has written: 'The complete folkdance notebook' -- subject(s): Labanotation, Folk dancing
The president is in complete control, he doesn't need approval
Hello, I found an auction house that sold the complete set of badge's for somewhere between $500.00 and $750.00. Could not find anything else anywhere about these. Have you tried to contact Franklin Mint? Maybe they could tell you. Hap in New York
Being that the coins have been altered, for coin collectors they're only worth face value (for coins dated 1971-present) or melt value for the silver (anything before 1971). That being said, Elvis collectors spend a bit more freely on memorabilia. A full set has sold for upwards of $60 on eBay.
Pierce served one complete four-year term.
Stamps are often sold in booklets. Each page of the booklet is called a pane. Collectors like to get both complete booklets and complete panes for their collection.
William Paul Bricker has written: 'The Complete Book of Collecting Hobbies' -- subject(s): Collectors and collecting, hobbies, collectors, investment, instructions, how to, porcelain, silverware, coins, stamp collecting, stamps