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Toning Coins in Albums?

Because my 7-yr old son is involved in collecting coins with me, I have picked up a few of those thin Whitman coin albums for us to fill up with our change. These things are a piece of junk--for the Nickel and Dime albums I have to force the coins into the slots using a rubber bouncy ball and a hammer... Use your imagination.
It doesn't seem to damage the coins. My local dealer said the Whitman company was bought out by a Chinese company and the folders hadn't been the same since. Anyway, I saw some Danseco (sp?) albums at the coin dealer as well, and I seem to remember hearing on this forum that these albums cause toning over the years. Am I remembering this correctly? I was thinking my son and I could put some nice coins in one, and then by the time he's an adult or sometime they would be toned. Are there any cheap coin folders better than Whitman's that would be good for my son and I to fill up? Which ones tone nicely? Any advice would be greatly appreciated.

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Besides, with true natural toning, the outcome is never certain -- whether a coin will be attractive or not.
If you buy Dansco's go here. He is highly recommended by others and is most likely much cheaper than your local dealer.
Dan
<< <i>I was thinking my son and I could put some nice coins in one, and then by the time he's an adult or sometime they would be toned.
I really cannot believe you would want to intentionally tone your coins. This is one of the biggest problems I have with toned coins. Although you can argue it is a "natural" process, people are unnaturally and intentionally placing coins in certain conditions for the purpose of creating a tone on it.
This amazes me. Chances are the toning will be ugly, so why ruin a perfectly fine silver coin?
I know I know. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. We all collect in different ways.
Good luck on your toning project.