My answere to Sunnywood
TONEDDOLLARS
Posts: 2,928 ✭✭✭✭
Sunnywood, as mentioned by Stman, I am trying to complete a date and mint set of nicley toned Morgans. I do say nicley , because as some of you know not all Morgans come with banded rainbows or vivid colors. Some, you may find with envolope toning or album toning or EOR. They may not be as dramatic as bag toned, but they are still nicley toned. A lot of the dates in the late ninetys and earliy 1900's come with monochromatic type toning. I have been working on my set for quite a few years, with a lot of help from my friends on these boards. GSAGUY, ArtR, Greattoning, Annaconda, Coingame 2000 and Morganlover just to name a few. I do not know if this set will ever be finished, for I am always upgrading and adding additional coins to the ones I already own. It is the thrill of the hunt that keeps me interested. I do own a few duplicates of certain dates that I would find very hard to sell, but I would if one of the more elusive dates I need became available.
I have, with some of the coins in my collection paid dearly for the right to own them. As much as 10x to 15x for common date coins such as the early S mints. I also own these same dates for not much more than bid, and they are just as colorful. It depends on who owns them and how much they are asking. I also have some rarer dates in my collection, such as the 94-s in 65 1904 in 65 and a 94-o in 63 that I paid around bid for. Some a few dollars over and some a few dollars less. It appears to me that you have a better chance of paying closer to bid for a coin the rarer it is. There does not appear to be that much of a premium for this type of coin. Now I'm sure if some one had a tough date with color and knew that I wanted it for my collection, they could try to hold me up for a very large profit. Probaly the reason some on the registry people keep their collections private. At the recent FUN show I ran into someone who had a 94-o in 64, it is about a $450-$500 coin. He knew I needed it for my collection and told me he valued it at $4500. I did not. It was the best 94-o I had ever seen, but I was not willing to make him rich on this one coin. I'm sure he could have paid a lot of money for this coin, but I did not think so. It was purchased in a collection of toned Morgans that he bought at the show. I just felt that he wanted to hold my feet to the fire. Another time, another dealer maybe I would have tried harder to buy this coin. Now looking at this story I'm saying that I would and have paid 10x to 15x for a common date but would not pay 10x for a much harder date. I really should have tried harder to buy this coin.
I have met and talked with quite a few toned Morgan collectors from these boards. Most of these collectors are accumulating every gem toned dollar they can find. I on the other hand would much rather have a complete collection of toned Morgans as hard as that might seem to be to complete. There is at least an end in sight, a goal so to say. My other toned Morgan collectors that I talk with are pursuing an endless chase. No matter how nice that last 81-s is that they bought they find another one at the next show. You could never own all the pretty toned dollars in the world, well maybe all but GSAGUY, he does seem to have a few nice ones. As ArtR says all the time there are other collections that people just do not know about, so you can not say so and so has the best.
I have talked with quite a few people here who have made it very hard to find some dates because I think they have them all or most of the great ones.
My goal is to build a great toned Morgan collection that is complete. When this will happen only God knows. At this time I am 22 coins short of completing this task. I will say that I am not happy with all the coins in my collection, but most of them are keepers. Would everyone or anyone feel the same as I do about my collection? I doubt it. Some collectore want only banded rainbows, some want vivid colors, I want really nicely toned coins that are lustorous and well struck.
I hope this long rambling response answeres a few of the questions posed by Sunnywood and others. I am not really a english major and do not write very well, that is why I mostly try to lurk and learn. That is what these boards have done for me, allowed me the ability to pick others brains by what they write.
Thanks TD
I have, with some of the coins in my collection paid dearly for the right to own them. As much as 10x to 15x for common date coins such as the early S mints. I also own these same dates for not much more than bid, and they are just as colorful. It depends on who owns them and how much they are asking. I also have some rarer dates in my collection, such as the 94-s in 65 1904 in 65 and a 94-o in 63 that I paid around bid for. Some a few dollars over and some a few dollars less. It appears to me that you have a better chance of paying closer to bid for a coin the rarer it is. There does not appear to be that much of a premium for this type of coin. Now I'm sure if some one had a tough date with color and knew that I wanted it for my collection, they could try to hold me up for a very large profit. Probaly the reason some on the registry people keep their collections private. At the recent FUN show I ran into someone who had a 94-o in 64, it is about a $450-$500 coin. He knew I needed it for my collection and told me he valued it at $4500. I did not. It was the best 94-o I had ever seen, but I was not willing to make him rich on this one coin. I'm sure he could have paid a lot of money for this coin, but I did not think so. It was purchased in a collection of toned Morgans that he bought at the show. I just felt that he wanted to hold my feet to the fire. Another time, another dealer maybe I would have tried harder to buy this coin. Now looking at this story I'm saying that I would and have paid 10x to 15x for a common date but would not pay 10x for a much harder date. I really should have tried harder to buy this coin.
I have met and talked with quite a few toned Morgan collectors from these boards. Most of these collectors are accumulating every gem toned dollar they can find. I on the other hand would much rather have a complete collection of toned Morgans as hard as that might seem to be to complete. There is at least an end in sight, a goal so to say. My other toned Morgan collectors that I talk with are pursuing an endless chase. No matter how nice that last 81-s is that they bought they find another one at the next show. You could never own all the pretty toned dollars in the world, well maybe all but GSAGUY, he does seem to have a few nice ones. As ArtR says all the time there are other collections that people just do not know about, so you can not say so and so has the best.
I have talked with quite a few people here who have made it very hard to find some dates because I think they have them all or most of the great ones.
My goal is to build a great toned Morgan collection that is complete. When this will happen only God knows. At this time I am 22 coins short of completing this task. I will say that I am not happy with all the coins in my collection, but most of them are keepers. Would everyone or anyone feel the same as I do about my collection? I doubt it. Some collectore want only banded rainbows, some want vivid colors, I want really nicely toned coins that are lustorous and well struck.
I hope this long rambling response answeres a few of the questions posed by Sunnywood and others. I am not really a english major and do not write very well, that is why I mostly try to lurk and learn. That is what these boards have done for me, allowed me the ability to pick others brains by what they write.
Thanks TD
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Comments
We'll use our hands and hearts and if we must we'll use our heads.
I sold most of my high dollar, vivid Morgans to be able to purchase some of the more expensive dates. I am 14 dates shy of completing my set, and at some point I may need to sell the rest of my duplicate toned Morgans to do it. It's hard enough to complete a Morgan set, but to do it with all nice toned coins is a real challange.
You can view my collection by clicking on NGC of my sig. line
Rainbow Stars
Thanks for sharing--and I mean that sincerely.
Clankeye
<< <i>K6AZ is your set all Toned????
You can view my collection by clicking on NGC of my sig. line >>
A good part of my set is toned to one degree or another. I try to avoid blast white coins, but I do have some in my collection. As I find nice toned examples, I will buy the toned coin and put it in my set. I also really like peripherally toned dollars, and will buy those over blast white coins. Here is my set, and if I had to pick my favorite, it would be the 85-CC:
K6AZ PCGS Set
I have my set listed on NGC as well, with some of my NGC duplicates listed. It has been a while since I have updated the set at NGC.
By the way, when I click on your NGC link, it only brings up the listing of all the sets, which one is yours?
I like that 85-cc very lustorous indeed
Rainbow Stars
peacockcoins
Rainbow Stars
Not including the dates that are hard to find in any mint state condition, some of the harder dates to find with nice toning include:
1889-O
1890-P,O
1891-P,O
1892-P,O
1893-P
1894-S
1900-S
1901-S
1902-S
1904-P
TD
Rainbow Stars
Rainbow Stars
Rainbow Stars
I can see now why there is a passion in hunting these down. They're not around every corner, at every coin shop, just waiting to be cherried. I'd imagine many shows and Dealers stock has to be checked before even one shows up.
Thanks for sharing this information (and, photos!).
peacockcoins
TD
Rainbow Stars
roadrunner
Thanks Roadrunner, hope to see you soon at Wors.
Rainbow Stars
I have handled a few of those with the stripe on the reverse. It came from a certain album that was a clear rubbery plastic. I cannot remember the name of the albums though. It would be cool to find a wild bright toner from one of those.
Thanks for your great post !!! Now I know why it is so difficult to find the A+ toned examples - you guys already own them all !!!! I think the pursuit of a complete set is a fantastic goal that would keep anyone busy for many years. True, it's easier and more immediately gratifying to buy lots of colorful common date coins. For those who just buy color, and who hoard these coins, that can be a lot of fun. After all, no two are alike, so you can't really call them "duplicates." But I share your preference of finding attractively and colorfully toned examples of as many different dates as possible. I would never imagine completing the set though, my goodness.
Thanks & berst,
Sunnywood
Sunnywood's Rainbow-Toned Morgans (Retired)
Sunnywood's Barber Quarters (Retired)
Rainbow Stars
<< <i>Toned Dollars feat of getting within 16 dates and mints of completion of a gem and near gem toned Morgan dollar set can only be called monumental. >>
Isn't that the truth.
Let's face it when it comes to a collection of Morgan Dollars, if your pockets are deep enough, it's not a very hard task to put the complete set together in Brilliant Uncirculated, in other words white. To put this set together with nice toning, to me is one of the toughest accomplishments in Numismatics.
Jack, keep up the good work. It will take time as you well know, but I am confident that you will get there.
<< <i>Jack, keep up the good work. It will take time as you well know, but I am confident that you will get there >>
ArtR: With your help and greatr eye for quality, I'm sure I'll get there a little quicker
Marshall: thanks for the kind words. After all the emails that have gone back and forth between us showing photos of our collection, I have seen some really nice coins you have that I SHOULD add to my collection
Rainbow Stars
I just spent the last half hour admiring your collection. Beautiful!
Rainbow Stars