The gold plating adds nothing to the value of the coin and has no collectible value at all unless you find someone who wants it.
Often pawn shops are the ones that will buy collectible stamps. In that area code there is a Shaker Coin & Gold that indicates they buy stamps. There are a number of others in the area. Look for Stamp Dealers in your zip code in the yellow pages or online.
Copies of coins have no numismatic collectible value. It may have some value if you can find someone that wants it.
The U.S. Mint has never struck a gold quarter. The coin has likely been plated for use as jewelry or sold as a so-called collectible. The piece has no numismatic collectible value. It's considered an altered coin and is only worth face value unless you find somebody that want's it.
Copies of coins have no numismatic collectible value. It may have some value if you can find someone that wants it.
$2.00 for the silver under the gold, the plating destroyed any collectible value the may have had.
Gold plated coins are novelty coins with no collectible value and are not made by the US Mint.
Because they mostly have a collectible value.
The melt value of a 23K gold plated Pokemon card would be minimal, as the gold plating is extremely thin and would not contain a significant amount of gold. The value would primarily come from the collectible nature of the card itself rather than the gold content. It's important to note that the value of collectible items can fluctuate based on market demand and condition of the item.
It's just a state quarter that has been gold plated and it has no collectible value at all, unless you find someone that wants it.
The value is just for the gold by weight. It has no collectible value.
I think it is rather expensive as it is a collectible year and not many made with that amount of gold.