so i could do laundry
and i idint bother opening it till now
and every single coin is a collectors type coin not a single one is regular elk head
so i could do laundry
and i idint bother opening it till now
and every single coin is a collectors type coin not a single one is regular elk head
Your threads are always so...confusing. What do now?
what's different about the collectors quarter that you can't use it for laundry? Other then being fancy, a quarter should be a quarter, especially if from a bank in a roll. In america we have states quarters and normal quarters, both are the exact same thing besides a different image on back but still work the same in machines
You have elk heads on your coins?
I'd be happy if I were you. I love collectors coins, I have a whole... em, collection of them.
I can see how this can be a problem for you though. Ours are different size than regular coins, so machines probably wouldn't accept them.
is just i usaully want to collect these coins not spend them on things
Meh, the US collector quarters got to be so damn common that you could save a set and still be swimming in them. The printed just those, for years. It's rare to get a "normal" quarter. So yeah, I just use 'em all the time. No reason not to.
My mom put a down payment on a car with the state quarter collection she amassed. That doesn't really add to this topic but...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Quarter_Reverse_2010.png
In case you were curious. Its also a caribou, not an elk.
It depends on when it was issued.The Delaware quarter is hard to come by.The way they were issued was by order that a state ratified the contitution...then beyond the originial 13 by order of admittance to the union.The treasury didn't realize how popular the state quarters were at first so the first 2 or 3 states are harder to find then quarters minted in the series after them.