Does anyone like original coins anymore?
Tonelover
Posts: 1,554 ✭
All this talk of judicious dipping just because the coin isn't bright white. Coins being sent to NCS to remove a bit of haze or a little spot. I'm trying to think about when the last time a record price was set at auction for a dipped, conserved coin and I can't think of one. Yet everyone wonders why dealers won't pay strong money for their coins. All the coins that I see selling for high prices are original beauties. Like it or not, experienced and knowledgable collectors prefer their coins original and will pay more for them.
If you don't like haze or spots on your coins, don't buy them and wait for one that meets with your approval the first time around. If you already own coins that could use a little help, sorry, it happens to the best of us. But do yourself a favor and buy nicer ones next time. They may cost a little more if you can possibly swing that but you'll be so much better off. While reviews here are very favorable for NCS treated coins, I have seen some and I wouldn't buy a single one of them. Returned them all to the owners saying "no thanks". Liberty Nickels, Washington Quarters, Seated Halves, whatever, they look unnatural and way too artificial. When I first started collecting I too thought that bright was best, but now I'll take a coin with it's original skin any day over one of those concocted monsters. I just passed on a coin that I've been seeking for three years now because it was NCS'd and was so white it was pathetic. I didn't want it below Bluesheet. If it was original, even with a little bit of "haze" i.e. toning, I would have paid twice that without batting an eye.
I know, they're your coins and you can do what you want with them. If you like white coins so be it. This isn't a toning/white debate. While there is much temporary joy being delivered in bottles of MS-70 and crates of NCS submissions, it is my opinion that the long term effects of such treatments will turn out to be a big negative. I think about how many original coins will be left 50 years from now and the picture looks bleak. Go easy on those coins people. Please?
If you don't like haze or spots on your coins, don't buy them and wait for one that meets with your approval the first time around. If you already own coins that could use a little help, sorry, it happens to the best of us. But do yourself a favor and buy nicer ones next time. They may cost a little more if you can possibly swing that but you'll be so much better off. While reviews here are very favorable for NCS treated coins, I have seen some and I wouldn't buy a single one of them. Returned them all to the owners saying "no thanks". Liberty Nickels, Washington Quarters, Seated Halves, whatever, they look unnatural and way too artificial. When I first started collecting I too thought that bright was best, but now I'll take a coin with it's original skin any day over one of those concocted monsters. I just passed on a coin that I've been seeking for three years now because it was NCS'd and was so white it was pathetic. I didn't want it below Bluesheet. If it was original, even with a little bit of "haze" i.e. toning, I would have paid twice that without batting an eye.
I know, they're your coins and you can do what you want with them. If you like white coins so be it. This isn't a toning/white debate. While there is much temporary joy being delivered in bottles of MS-70 and crates of NCS submissions, it is my opinion that the long term effects of such treatments will turn out to be a big negative. I think about how many original coins will be left 50 years from now and the picture looks bleak. Go easy on those coins people. Please?
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Comments
As long as the surface is thick and original...
(Of course, too much dipping strips away the surface...)
EVP
How does one get a hater to stop hating?
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Jim
Dip that baby. Be a sheep. Dip that baby. Ole Ben needs a bath!
Ok... that's a nice, original specimen as far as I can tell.
EVP
How does one get a hater to stop hating?
I can be reached at evillageprowler@gmail.com
Maybe someone will outbid me on this one
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BC
i like original toned coins if attractive
but i also love deep cameo proof coins pre 1915 blast white as long as they have the right look with clean clear spot/hazefree deep mirrors and monster cameos as this is how they were supposed to look when struck
a speciality coin also with grreat flash and blast and if with the right look to me that is okie
even if only super close to the above
the problem is that this only applies to one out of many i see as per the above
sincerely michael
Bulldog
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Rick
Freshness and originality should be paramount...a collection built by demanding adherence to these two qualities will have far more sophistication and value than any other collection that does not. Plain and simple.
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Michael
You are 100% right on...
Come on "coin doctors", show our ever-shrinking original inventory a little respect.
Dave
One bad point is with all the dipping and conserving from the past and even more now, it drives the prices up even more on coins with original surfaces. And I'm going broke having to pay these prices, but I enjoy them much better than the early days of my collection.
A wonderfully and wholly original toned coins speaks to me. A washed out over dipped one does too- but it's a foreign language and difficult for me to understand.
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Ken
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Kscope
Your 100% correct, well said .
PS. Love those SLQ you have in your collection.
bought a Proof 68 Barber half from an auction that was technically a PR68, but very ugly, (dark brown), and after it was dipped professionally, it became a PCGS PR68 cameo. That coion was dipped 6 years ago and it has not changed. It is still as white as snow.
I am no different than many collectors - being a graphic designer for a living, I've always been inherently finicky for a uniform appearance, and so as a budding collector, very neatly polished up many of my silver coins!
Not to worry though, it was only a couple well-worn common Morgans, and other low grade type. Doesn't make it any better in principle, but nothing special was ruined.
Those pieces were eventually sold off, and as I began to become more sophisticated, an appreciation for nice naturally brilliant coins developed, especially among Washington Quarters. Among those for example is a perfectly decent, brilliant '48-S.
I mention this date because I just picked up another '48-S yesterday. It's a little bit different, being an ex-mint set piece. Has a beautiful crescent of rose and gold around the lower obverse with a creamy-silvery center, while the back is evenly covered in the same rose toning spread rather thickly, with the luster peeking through tiny fissures in the toning.
Admittedly, a lot of "pretty toning" descriptions are just so much puffery - but sometimes (as in this case) it's well-deserved. I also (naturally) think of tonelover's current icon in this regard. This new quarter of mine just puts its "normal" brilliant counterpart to shame, as far as the interesting to me scale goes. I shudder to think of the dull, lifeless monster that would be created, were it ever dipped.
To those who would dip out their pieces, please just be careful and judicious in doing so. One time may not appear to hurt it but, well, it didn't come out so good ... let's just try that again ... hmmm...
Thanks for listenin'!
Not much else to say, you hit it right on for me. I have a number of coins in my collection that others might find unattractive for various reasons, but they are appreciated by me for their originality.
Very good post. Very much in agreement with what you wrote.
Clankeye