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Is not toning on only one side of coin a sure sign of NT?

I was not aware of the prevalence of AT until recently monitoring this forum and seeing actual pics with explanations.
Is it a safe bet that a coin is NT if there is toning on only one side and relatively untoned on the other as mint bagged and rolls coins were mostly exposed to bag fabric or roll paper on just one side? Do the AT technicians have a hard time with duplicating this and go with the two sided toning as all the examples of AT I:ve seen have this?
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Is it a safe bet that a coin is NT if there is toning on only one side and relatively untoned on the other as mint bagged and rolls coins were mostly exposed to bag fabric or roll paper on just one side? Do the AT technicians have a hard time with duplicating this and go with the two sided toning as all the examples of AT I:ve seen have this?
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Greg
If a coin was heated very hot, you could not heat one side more than the other very easily
If chemicals where applied, pretty easy to do just one side.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
Envelope and album toning is the result of the coin being exposed on both sides to paper or cardboard.
Endroll toning has distinct angle patterns and is the result of coins sitting on the end of a paper roll
Bag toning is the result of the coin sitting against the side of a mint bag and reacting to the sulfur in the cloth thereby creating very vibrant colors
Crescent toning is the same as bag toning, only a coin has been superimposed on another, therefore a crescent shape has been created
Textile toning is still yet another variant of bag toning, where the actual textile pattern has been imprinted on the coin.
Mint set toning - very vibrant, or sometimes dull speckled toning patters typical of some 1940's-50's coins
Natural skin - Im giving this name to any toning that falls into the category of grey/black for silver coins and brown for copper coins
Now, knowing that these patterns exist, I ask the next question. Which pattern could the coin in question fall into. If I can possibly attribute the type of toning that might have caused this, next I'll ask myself - given the type of toning - how could it have "grown" on the coin. Because we are talking about a chemical reaction, I think of toning as starting small, and "creeping" through out the coin. Over time and depending on where the toning ebbs and flows, you will have certain indicators which will tell you if the toning is good or not. Colors will flow from one color to the next in a seemingly natural flow, though this may not always be the case, the recesses of devices will be toned one color, while the tops of will be another (you often find the letters and dates on a genuine toned coin have one color and the inside space has another), the edge and denticles of the coin (if it has denticles) are toned one color, and the miniscule spaces between and next to them are toned another.
Finally, the overall coin has a "look" about it that tells you it's toned naturally. This is the toughest trait to judge, because it comes strictly with experience. Most brilliantly toned coins as referred to above, will be uncirculated, and therefore the toning on these coins will have an almost irridescent, transparent look to it (most, not all the time). AT coins, in my mind look like the toning was imposed or painted on, thereby impeding the luster coming through (most, not all the time). When I first started dinking around with toned coins I was often fooled by coins that I thought looked "good enough" but when I started reading and listening to the pros as to what to look for I felt rather foolish. Because of the ways coin doctors have found to tone coins, there are exceptions to every rule that I have cited above, so I'm not claiming that this is a foolproof way to tell whether a coin is properly toned or not. These are some of the things that I look for to determine whether or not I want to sink some of my hard earned money on a coin that has color.
Below are some examples of naturally toned coins that I've found, and a few fakes that I've found:
Album Toned:
Endroll Toned:
Bag Toned:
Crescent Toned:
Mint set toned:
AT Coins:
Another fantastic post! If you repeat that another 1000 times, I may begin to start understanding this stuff. Even after soaking up everything posted around here, it still confuses the hell out of me.
Take this coin, for example:
It displays many of the characteristics you've described that would indicate natural toning. But, is it?
Russ, NCNE
I am not going to open and read anymore AT threads with yours the last word.
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See Current Sales on Etsy
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Glenn
Glenn
Other 19th century coins spent lots of time in coin cabinets with one side facing up for years. One side tones; the other doesn't or tones differently.