New form of counter fitting a double die. I thinks so. It's a machining process called etching. To keep it simple, it's like taking a piece of steal and covering the area you want to keep. Then it gets put into an acid, the acid only eats away at the exposed metal, not eating away at the ink. With several processes you can create one of a kind shapes. I think this process is widely used in the making of the WWE belts. I seen this coin on eBay listed as the 1916 double die. The ribbon is not thick enough to be the double die. Etching is the only process I can come up with for some to create this look on a coin. Just wanted to share another method of machining and ways of altering a coin so as the more we know the better we are.



Be verwy verwy quiet... I'm hunting coins!!! 
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