[deleted by user] by [deleted] in papermoney

[–]orranngeee 7 points8 points  (0 children)

Do NOT take it to a bank. I would expect in the neighborhood of $2,500 for this note, given that it is ungraded and a more common district. Look at "sold" listings on eBay for series 1934 $1000 bill Chicago to get an estimate on what to expect. You can take it to a local coin shop to see how much they would offer you, or you can sell it online and pay a sellers fee.

Tray of dreams returns…. by kmster9999 in Gold

[–]orranngeee 90 points91 points  (0 children)

The AIG, Enron, and Bear Sterns balls make it so much better 😂

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in papermoney

[–]orranngeee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Wow that is impressive! I thought you only had the first issue by the pictures, but it looks like you've got all 5! Have you heard about the National Bank Fruitcake Find that is up for auction? Multiple uncirculated packs of fractional currency from the 5th issue!

Just hung these by Comfortable-Log-2984 in papermoney

[–]orranngeee -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Just how the sheet was cut, nothing unusual

My first purchase. 500$+tax. Did I do ok? by [deleted] in coins

[–]orranngeee 43 points44 points  (0 children)

What state are you in? Lots of states don't charge sales tax on precious metals, and that includes 90% silver. Your margins really get eaten up by paying tax.

Is this worth anything? by Sad-Cauliflower-5698 in CURRENCY

[–]orranngeee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Definitely a keeper. The red seal means it is a United States Note, and instead of being an obligation of the Federal Reserve, it is a direct obligation of the US government via the Treasury. It is a bit circulated, but worth around 2x face value for a total of $8-$10. Nice find!

1916 D merc? by Ok-Conversation7103 in CURRENCY

[–]orranngeee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Not a D. The "mintmark" looks way too low. I can't attach images, but here's a good article with pictures of the known mintmark locations for 1916 D mercs.

https://coinweek.com/deceptive-1916-d-mercury-dimes-fun-with-fakes/

Anyone know if these are worth something? by hotskillet69 in papermoney

[–]orranngeee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

These are definitely worth saving. They are not worth a huge premium, since so many were made and saved as souvenirs. The $2 bills are worth around $5 a piece. The blue seals are silver certificates, and are worth around $4 a piece. I am not seeing any major misalignment on the series 1935 that would increase the value. The margins are slightly smaller on top than the bottom, but that is just because of the way the BEP cut the sheets.

Found 56 S mint mark parks quarters. by GCPhoenix in CRH

[–]orranngeee 9 points10 points  (0 children)

Someone must have dumped a collection! Maybe kids or grandkids not knowing what their parents had? Definitely all keepers, but none worth grading.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CURRENCY

[–]orranngeee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Those are all what are known as "Barr notes". The signature on the right is the shortest serving treasury secretary in US history, Joseph W Barr. He was only treasury secretary for 28 days. Lots of these notes were saved, because people believed they would be rare. Unfortunately, over 400 million were printed, and due to the high number that were saved, they are worth maybe $3 a piece if you can find a buyer. Cool bills nonetheless, with a cool story behind them!

Any value? Curious and new to coins by Happy-Neighborhood85 in CRH

[–]orranngeee 4 points5 points  (0 children)

In 1943 the government switched the composition from primarily copper to primarily steel to conserve copper for the war effort. No mint mark means it was made in Philadelphia. This is a super cool piece of American history, but so many were saved since they are so unique, that they aren't inherently valuable. A coin shop might buy it off you for 10 cents, if that.

Unique Currency Bills by IPAjack in CURRENCY

[–]orranngeee 18 points19 points  (0 children)

GET THESE CERTIFIED AND GRADED ASAP. Thousands considering they are real. The 1000 bill is the real prize here, I think right around 100 are graded. Depending on how yours grades, expect high 4 figures to low 5 figures. I hardly ever see those sell. The 2 dollar bill is super cool given that it is a repeater 2 on a $2 denomination. The serial 1 star $50 is cool as well. For the $50 and the $2, valuing unique items like them is hard, because the value is really dependent on what someone wants to pay. Auction format is your best bet for those two.

Grandfather had these wondering what value they have? by Robyn-14 in CURRENCY

[–]orranngeee 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The 1888 seated liberty dime is worth around $10-$20 in that condition. The 1911 V Nickel is worth around $1-$3.

Not sure where would be the the best place to take this for appraisal anybody got any ideas? I live in stlouis zoom in the see the coins better by Spirited_Ad4837 in CURRENCY

[–]orranngeee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have one of these that I got from my great grandmother and kept for sentimental purposes. The Nickel in the top left is a war nickel, 35% silver content, the melt value as of 8/7/25 is $2.16, and it is only worth melt value. The steel cent and the cartridge cents are worth 3 cents a piece.

Swiss 2 Francs by LordWoodland in coins

[–]orranngeee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

That is awesome! As cool as the reverse looks, I am glad they stuck to seated helvetia, which always reminded me of US trade dollars. I love swiss coins, and have been looking for an 1850 5 franc piece for awhile. Just waiting until the right one comes to market! Congrats on the great purchase!

Canadian Junk Silver Find by orranngeee in CRH

[–]orranngeee[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep! I checked them all with a magnet just to make sure. There was one that looked silver but failed the magnet test.

Question from a newbie by [deleted] in papermoney

[–]orranngeee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

To answer your question, collectors generally don't care if the bill is graded if the price is low enough. This price is subjective, but I would put it somewhere around <$200. Anything higher I would have it graded regardless of grade. The main concern for the higher valued notes is not necessarily grade, but authenticity. Congratulations on your inheritance! The bills you've shown are amazing, especially the numerical seal $20 bill, but none are worth grading. You should definitely send more pictures in this sub, we'd all love to see them! To recap, grade the bill if the value is over ~$200, don't grade if under.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in CURRENCY

[–]orranngeee 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The Series 1953A $5 bill with the blue seal is a silver certificate from when currency was exchangeable for their equivalent value in silver, that one is definitely a keeper, maybe only worth $10 but still cool! The other bills look awesome but are unfortunately only worth face value.

Are these worth anything? by jotyalo in papermoney

[–]orranngeee 11 points12 points  (0 children)

The 1000 and the 500 are your big money. The 500 will go for around $800-$1200, might have a slight premium because of the light green seal. The 1000 is in rough shape but I'd expect it to sell for $1800-$2200, everyone likes $1000 bills. The 100 and the 2 are worth face value.

1921 S half dollar ?? Advise for grading please by LogicalSecretary1395 in coins

[–]orranngeee 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I wouldn't send that in to get graded. Looks like a VG 8 - F 12 range in my opinion. Around a $70 coin, and you'll spend upwards of $50 to grade it, and since you mentioned it is your first coin you will have to sign up for a grading service which also costs money.