Lovely and lustrous light brown and gold, with a notably olive tint over the lower two-thirds of the reverse. The cartwheel is unbroken and substantial, and the visual appeal is as excellent as would be expected from the assigned grade. Only trivial marks are seen, none of which is eye-catching. The die state is typical, with soft detail at the denticles and traces of clashing around Libertys portrait. The central devices and legends are very well struck on both sides. This variety appears with substantial variation in die rotation, and this piece shows the reverse rotated slightly counterclockwise, within the 20-30 degree range noted by Manley as one of those that had been reported.This die variety represents the final appearance of the Stemless reverse that previously struck half cents dated both 1804 and 1805. This emboldened Gilbert and Cohen to place this marriage first in their numbering sequence, but Manley and Breen correctly note that this obverse was earlier used to strike the Cohen-3 combination, the rarest variety of the date by a substantial margin. The Cohen-1 variety is common in the context of early half cents, and even high grade examples are not difficult to find. Gems like this remain highly elusive, however. Despite the relative plenty of nice examples, PCGS has only ever seen one better.