Need an opinion on Barber half.. (large pic)
aussielover
Posts: 177
Hi
Please give thoughts or an opinion on this Barber half. What causes this dark toning, is this considered corroded?
Thanks
Brian
Please give thoughts or an opinion on this Barber half. What causes this dark toning, is this considered corroded?
Thanks
Brian
0
Comments
The 1896-O is a very difficult date to find in midgrades (thanks to Tyler's mini-hoard of them!). Your specimen looks like a VF20. A very nice looking coin in my opinion.
There doesn't appear to be any pitting, just honest wear.
Overall, I like it!
Another problem is that some coins get a bit too dark and collectors did take a cloth to them and rub them some to lighten em' up. This will create light hairlines, and remove some of the toning, but not all. It looks like across the face there might be some light hairlines either from a light rub or from plastic slide marks found in some folders.
If you like it that is what matters, and often this date is found very harshly cleaned if it can be found at all.
Tyler
And under harsh light, there seems to be hairlines on the face and was wondering if all hairlines are considered cleaned?
Also, how are strikes compared to other "O" mints for this date? LIBERTY is not quite full and the wing span combined not quite make VF20 imo..
Overall, it is very attractive specimen but the hairlines kind a makes me think twice. Would you think pcgs will bag it? If not, what grade?
Thanks
Brian
Speaking of New Orleans, the weak strike from this mint is most prevalent on coins from 1896-1907, with 1902 being the worst year.
As Tyler said, the hairlines on the cheek may be from a light wiping or they might be slide marks from being in a coin album. Personally, I would not send midgrade Barber Halves to PCGS; they absolutely do not know how to grade them correctly and consistently. Sorry, PCGS, but it's true.
Your coin is a solid VF 20. Great find !
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !
New Barber Purchases
Brian
John
siliconvalleycoins.com
<< <i>is this considered corroded >>
Not by a long shot!
Just curious since there seems to be a number of barber experts on the site how would you in a short blurb grade Barber Halves in G to AU.....
I am working on a VG set which I consider Full rims, partial LIBERTY & E Pluribus Unum and some feathers. Have 34/73 so far.
Anyway, here is link to a site showing VG10 - VF30 Grading Barber halves
This is a cursory grading criteria for the halves, but strike must be taken into account on some dates. The early O mint coins of 1895-1902 are the most notorious for being weakly struck.
G4 = mostly full rims (early S & O mint dates tended to wear unevenly, and the reverse wears away much faster)
G6 = Full rims (almost always), 1 or 2 letters of LIBERTY.
VG8 = Full rims (this is a must at VG8) Three letters of LIBERTY, some laurel wreath detail
VG10 = Five letters of LIBERTY, almost full laurel wreath (usually last leaf is missing), reverse wing feather has some detail VG10
F12 = All letters of LIBERTY must be visible. Usually the BER is 1/3 full, and just the tops are showing. F12
F15 = All Letters of LIBERTY must be visible. The BER is stronger and about 3/4 present. Reverse wing feather detail is about 1/2 present. F15
F18 = Not a grade commonly used, but for enthusiasts, it is that grade that just barely misses VF F18
VF20 = LIBERTY is complete. Reverse wing feather detail is at about 3/4. VF20
VF30 = LIBERTY is bold. Reverse wing feather detail is almost full, but tips are flat. VF30
XF40 - Band under LIBERTY is defined. Reverse wing feather detail is full and wing tips are complete. XF40
XF45 - Band under LIBERTY is bold. Reverse wing feather tips are three dimensional. XF45
Hopefully that helps some.
Tyler
I see I was a little harsh in my Fine & Very Fine grading.
Edited to add: I LOVE that XF 1898-O !!!
~~~~~~~~~~~~
Coin collecting is not a hobby, it's an obsession !
New Barber Purchases
<< <i>Edited to add: I LOVE that XF 1898-O !!! >>
AGREED!!!
<< <i>And under harsh light, there seems to be hairlines on the face >>
I take this back. **ok after starring at the coin for more than 2 hrs my eyes are now well.. i see dead people** Anyway I concluded that they are not hairlines, they are light scratches from either plastic slides or normal wear.. ok, I feel much better now.
Brian