Here is another Lanz coin, and I am confident that at least the obverse has had some smoothing, most obviously the fields left and right of the bust. The smoothing got me to thinking about how someone might take a regular eyes to heaven Dafne with legend and completely smooth it down and turn it into an anepigraphic type.
This is a rare type though and not listed in RIC VII. Interestingly, there is an example included in the Voetter catalogue of 1909 “Constantinvs Junior Inbesonders seine Münzen als Augustus und die gleichzeitigen Kupferprägungen in den römischen Münzstätten†from workshop B (see picture below).
Maurice also mentions an unpublished coin with diademed head and no legend..."une tete diademee sans legende" (pg 514 #3) in his book "Numismatique Constantinienne" 1911.
The anepigraphic type was then "rediscovered" circa 1989 when several examples began turning up in auctions.
Another bit from Voetter-- RIC VII describes victory as holding a palm branch in each hand, though the right hand is holding something different, which looks like a laurel branch. Voetter recognized the difference between the two branches and in his 1921 catalogue on the Gerin collection described the reverse as "Victoria mit Zweig und Palmzweig" (Victory with branch and palmbranch)
Constantinus I. 306-337
Follis, Constantinopolis, 328 n.Chr.
Av: Büste mit Rosettendiadem nach rechts nach oben blickend.
Rv: CONSTANTINI-ANA DAFNE / CONSS (im Abschnitt), Victoria sitzt auf Altar nach links, hält in jeder Hand je einen Palmzweig, links Tropaeum, darunter gefesselter Barbar
3,16 gr 19 mm
Erhaltung: Geglättet, sonst fast vorzüglich
Sehr Selten
RIC VII Â (vgl. 29 ff.)