Why do coins look BETTER holdered?
braddick
Posts: 23,963 ✭✭✭✭✭
I came across some amazing rainbow toned mid fourties and early fifties Lincolns awhile back. The kind with booming luster and all kinds of shades of GREEN/ MAROON/ PURPLE/ ORANGE! They had been tissue wrapped and placed in little coin envelopes decades ago. The Dealer was kind enough to stamp the date on the envelopes with the cost of the cent (usually about .30 or so).
I just received a few of the choicest ones back from PCGS and was amazed at how beautiful they are. Not that I didn't recognize their eye appeal earlier, raw, but it got me to thinking.
Do I stand alone? My coins seems to be MORE attractive after they've been holdered/slabbed by PCGS!
Why is that? I know it's all in my mind, but I can't get over how the appeal jumps for me.
I just received a few of the choicest ones back from PCGS and was amazed at how beautiful they are. Not that I didn't recognize their eye appeal earlier, raw, but it got me to thinking.
Do I stand alone? My coins seems to be MORE attractive after they've been holdered/slabbed by PCGS!
Why is that? I know it's all in my mind, but I can't get over how the appeal jumps for me.
peacockcoins
0
Comments
The holder counts, too. Aside from the fact that a PCGS holder can transform a raw coin worth a few cents into a certified one marketable for hundreds of dollars, one must admit that the holders really make the coins more respectable-looking, and displayable. Plus there is the environmental protection to think about. Sure, slabs are not the final word in environmental protection, but they're a heckuva lot better than albums or 2 X 2's or flips...
I called NGC to get the status of the set (sent on the 19th of August) and was told, surprisingly, the coins were graded and on their way back to me! The phone person was even kind enough to offer to read the grades to me (wonderful customer service- I'm always afraid I'm taking too much of their time to even ask).
None of them were graded above MS66, but that's OK- it was the color I was after (alright, I admit, it would have been sweet if one of the Franklins had gone MS67!) and they sure will look good in the NGC white holders.
The only problem I have is copper- even color copper sometimes gets lost with all the white around it.
peacockcoins
Speaking of holders- has anyone but me noticed that the newer generation of NGC holders have a disturbing tendency for the label to flex and bend inside the slab, as though it wasn't pasted down that well? This was a minor irritation in the last submission I got, though I was otherwise quite pleased with them.
Here is an $85K example of what I'm talking about.
An absolute dream coin of that caliber deserves a better holder than that...
I like slabs (PCGS,NGC,ANACS) because: 1) it is at least a guarantee of authenticity; 2) the grade is at least close (no doubt it's not a perfect system); 3) it can be bought/sold with some assurance of quality (emphasis on the "some"); and 4) I can show my coins to a clumsy, oily, dirty, fingerprinter and not worry!
This last advantage of slabs should not be underestimated. I remember when I was about 12 years old and I was at a local coin shop here in Milwaukee and I dropped a coin that the dealer was showing me. Luckily, the coin fell onto the cloth on the counter and no damage was done but I was mortified!! That experience has stayed with me to this day. I don't want anybody that I'm showing a coin to have that same helpless feeling I had many years ago.
Would you hand over to a "newbie" one of your prized/expensive raw coins and let them handle it? If you would, you have a much stronger heart than I do!! Hand them a slab, get them interested in the hobby, and RELAX!!
Coppernicus
Lincoln Wheats (1909 - 1958) Basic Set - Always Interested in Upgrading!
(BTW, I've always thought "Coppernicus" was a cool handle...)
Doesn't your wife look better in a wedding dress? Or in the sexy little number you bought for when the kids are gone?
B.
A Tax is a fine for doing good.
Cameron Kiefer
My 1866 Philly Mint Set
For some life lasts a short while, but the memories it holds last forever.
-Laura Swenson
In memory of BL, SM, and KG. 16 and forever young, rest in peace.
<< <i>I think PCGS should offer color backgrounds in their holders. >>
A pox on your house!
It does depend on the set though. I had no problem breaking the most expensive coin I had ever bought out of the holder to put into an album.
It makes the coin look more official and dignified. Bear
Camelot
the plastic hides much of the coins looks especially so with toned and DMPL dollars i mean even pcgs when looking at some dmpl dollars raw they are dmpl but when put into their slabs do not look dmpl so this precludes then from grading dmpl! some coins are pushed way back inside the holder epsecially so ngc and the coin if medium toned looks much worse in the holder
you cant examine the edge of the coin which for lots of coins especially pre 1915 proofs large cents and their little half sisters, the list goes on and on the edge is of major importance1
now overall i like slabs but for me the coins will always look better outside of the holders when viewing! nothing like viewing a coin raw
sincerely michael