post mint damage

1975 Lincoln cent with a noticeable off center strike, leaving part of the design shifted toward the rim.
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How Off Center Does a Coin Need to Be to Have Value?

Off center coins are some of the easiest dramatic mint errors to spot, but not all of them are valuable. This guide breaks down how they happen, how to judge the percentage of the strike, and what actually matters when figuring out if one is worth keeping.

Close-up photo of a 1972 S Lincoln Memorial cent reverse showing a grease filled die. The words E PLURIBUS UNUM and parts of the upper Memorial detail appear faint and incomplete, with a soft, washed-out look due to debris blocking the strike.
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Grease Filled Dies: Why Your Coin Looks Half-Faded

When a coin looks weak or washed out in random places, most people think it’s worn down. Sometimes they’re right. Sometimes they’re not even close. This is a grease filled die. It happens when mint machinery gets clogged with thick gunk made of metal shavings, old oil, and debris. That paste fills the recessed parts…

1881 Indian Head Cent with heavy environmental damage showing green and brown corrosion, missing surface metal, rough texture, and uneven crust across the portrait and fields.
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A Close Look at Environmental Damage and Copper Breakdown

Environmental damage happens when copper reacts with oxygen, moisture, and soil chemicals. This 1881 Indian Head Cent shows every stage of that breakdown, from green corrosion to missing metal. It is not a mint error, but it is a perfect example of how copper changes over time.