According to ANA standards, a Good coin is "Heavily worn with design visible but faint in areas. Many details are flat." A Fine coin is defined as "Moderate to considerable even wear. Entire design is bold with overall pleasing appearance."
In coin grading, a "good" coin is heavily worn with barely visible design details, while a "fine" coin shows moderate wear with some design elements still clear. A good coin is typically graded within the range of AG-3 to G-4, while a fine coin falls within the F-12 to F-15 grading range.
The value of an 1875 Indian head cent will depend on its condition. If it is in good condition it has a value of 13.00. An uncirculated coin has a value of 169.00. A coin rated as fine is valued at 50.00, an extra fine coin is worth 100.00.
You must have a rare Shield 2 cent coin - a 1865 coin in good condition (G4) is worth: $16.00. fine condition (F12) is worth: $24.00 very fine condition (VF20) is worth: $28.00
A coin in "Very Fine" (VF) condition is considered to have moderate wear, with some loss of detail on the high points of the design. It may have minor scratches or abrasions, but overall will still have decent eye appeal.
This coin has no additional value unless it is of very good quality. A fully uncirculated coin is valued at $2.43. A coin in mint condition is valued at $1.62. A coin in extremely fine condition is valued at 81 cent. A coin in very fine condition is valued at 32 cents.
in good condition 25$ in fine condition 38$ very fine condition 80$ Almost Uncirculated condition 190$
"Fine" is a general numismatic grading term used to describe a coin with moderate wear. There are numeric sub-grades within Fine that parse out subtle differences, so you may see a coin described as F-12 or F-15, for example. There's a good Wikipedia link posted below.
"Good" condition is actually not very 'good' at all. In coin-speak a "Good" coin (capital G) is very worn, with the date, mint mark and denomination visible but most details worn off. You can check a book such as Photograde to see examples of the various conditions with names such as Poor, Good, Fine, Very Fine, AU, and so on.
"MS64" is short for "Mint State 64" and would refer to an uncirculated coin in very good, but not perfect, condition. MS70 would be a "perfect" coin, and MS60 would be the lowest uncirculated coin - no wear, but a lot of dings and probably not a great strike. If you're interested, "Good" is usually about MS4, "Very Good" MS8, "Fine" MS12 to MS15, "Very Fine" MS25 to MS30, "Extremely Fine" MS40 to MS45, and "Almost Uncirculated" MS50 to MS58 (usually MS52, MS55 or MS58).
I will put a value of $420.00 retail on this coin. That's the value of a Extremely Fine graded Quarter Eagle dated 1888
If you go to a Mint website, you will find the difference between Genuin & Replica. If your coin is Genuin, then is is worth about $1000.00 US dollars. If is a Replica, it is worth $1.00 US dollar.
That depends on the overall condition of the coin. If it's in good shape, it would be worth $13. If it is in fine shape, then it would be worth $20. If that coin has never been in circulation, it would be worth $90, providing that there is no damage on the coin and it has to be legible.
Of what coin.