Here is one you don't see all the time...

OK sure we see toners all the time, but when was the last time you saw a really pretty worn out buffalo nickel? Here is one that is F-12 and a nice toner. Enjoy this 100% NT coin.

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Comments
It is a nice looking coin BTW but too many threads here have convinced me that there is such a thing as aNT (artificial NT) or maybe nAT (natural AT).
<< <i>100% sure it is NT >>
What factual, foolproof evidence do you have that it's NT? Sure looks like a "cook job" to me.
Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."
<< <i> Please explain how you can be sure it is 100% NT. >>
I've seen a whitman folder full of ones that looked just like that. I don't doubt a bit it is NT.
the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed
Join the NRA and protect YOUR right to keep and bear arms
To protest against all hunting of game is a sign of softness of head, not soundness of heart. Theodore Roosevelt
[L]http://www.ourfallensoldier.com/ThompsonMichaelE_MemorialPage.html[L]
It is nice and pretty though
<< <i>Impossible to know for a fact. You can be sure, of course, but you can't know. You can only opine. >>
He could know, if it was his.
Think it through.
Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."
<< <i>A worn coin would not have those nice concentric toning bands if left to tone on its own naturally---this one was "helped" to look like this in my opinion. The metal on the worn coin would cause a different toning pattern. >>
NONSENSE! I have a cousin who collected coins from circulation throughout his childhood with my great grandfather as a mentor. Every Friday afternoon they would bring rolls upon rolls home from the bank, and over the years he filled albums -- Whitman and Mehrig slide albums -- with complete sets of practically everything from Barbers forward. I don't think he ever got a 1916 SLQ, but he got just about *everything* else. I have not seen his sets since I was about eleven (20+ years ago) but a good many of his coins looked like that then, and they have certainly never been messed with in any way.
Somewhere in my cousin's attic is a collection that would make many of us here piss ourselves if we saw it.
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BONGO HURTLES ALONG THE RAIN SODDEN HIGHWAY OF LIFE ON UNDERINFLATED BALD RETREAD TIRES
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<< <i>A worn coin would not have those nice concentric toning bands if left to tone on its own naturally---this one was "helped" to look like this in my opinion. The metal on the worn coin would cause a different toning pattern. >>
NONSENSE! I have a cousin who collected coins from circulation throughout his childhood with my great grandfather as a mentor. Every Friday afternoon they would bring rolls upon rolls home from the bank, and over the years he filled albums -- Whitman and Mehrig slide albums -- with complete sets of practically everything from Barbers forward. I don't think he ever got a 1916 SLQ, but he got just about *everything* else. I have not seen his sets since I was about eleven (20+ years ago) but a good many of his coins looked like that then, and they have certainly never been messed with in any way.
Somewhere in my cousin's attic is a collection that would make many of us here piss ourselves if we saw it. >>
I respect your opinion mirabela, I just think your opinion is nonsense to me.
I hold by my thoughts on this coin.
<< <i>Please explain how you can be sure it is 100% NT. >>
Because he did it himself, naturally!
<< <i>Please explain how you can be sure it is 100% NT.
It is a nice looking coin BTW but too many threads here have convinced me that there is such a thing as aNT (artificial NT) or maybe nAT (natural AT). >>
I originally got this coin back in 1991. The coin was silver colored. It was sitting in a holder for years in a safe. Over the years the color got to how it is. I took the coin out in like 2003 when I noticed it had got colors.
Edited to add:
This was a cardboard year set holder. One of each type from 1935. It was in a plastic case after that.
<< <i><< A worn coin would not have those nice concentric toning bands if left to tone on its own naturally---this one was "helped" to look like this in my opinion. The metal on the worn coin would cause a different toning pattern. >> >>
Say WHAT???? I have several albums, some with UNC coins, some with worn coins.. Admittadly they aren't toninig exactly like this one, (yet) but it hasn't been 15 years, only about 6, but they are however all toning about the same. Only difference is on the UNC coins, the toning seems to drift into the center of the coin a little more but on the circulated ones, it is only around the rims. We'll see in another 10 years or so. I have no doubt this is album toning, about at it's finest. I put these sets together in late 2000, early 2001 after visiting one of my local dealers who had just bought a whitman of buffs, he proudly said "take a look at these" and they were all toned just about like this one, some nearly covering the entire coin. Since then, mine have been safely in my safe. Awaiting the outcome
the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed
Join the NRA and protect YOUR right to keep and bear arms
To protest against all hunting of game is a sign of softness of head, not soundness of heart. Theodore Roosevelt
[L]http://www.ourfallensoldier.com/ThompsonMichaelE_MemorialPage.html[L]
<< <i>
<< <i><< A worn coin would not have those nice concentric toning bands if left to tone on its own naturally---this one was "helped" to look like this in my opinion. The metal on the worn coin would cause a different toning pattern. >> >>
Say WHAT???? I have several albums, some with UNC coins, some with worn coins.. Admittadly they aren't toninig exactly like this one, (yet) but it hasn't been 15 years, only about 6, but they are however all toning about the same. Only difference is on the UNC coins, the toning seems to drift into the center of the coin a little more but on the circulated ones, it is only around the rims. We'll see in another 10 years or so. I have no doubt this is album toning, about at it's finest. I put these sets together in late 2000, early 2001 after visiting one of my local dealers who had just bought a whitman of buffs, he proudly said "take a look at these" and they were all toned just about like this one, some nearly covering the entire coin. Since then, mine have been safely in my safe. Awaiting the outcome
Can you show me a pic of any of them so I can see how similar or dis-similar ("Admittadly they aren't toninig exactly like this one, (yet)") they are?
Just one pic to help me understand that a circulated Buff can tone like this---see the toning over the word LIBERTY...
I would like to understand this a little better.
<< <i>
<< <i>Please explain how you can be sure it is 100% NT.
It is a nice looking coin BTW but too many threads here have convinced me that there is such a thing as aNT (artificial NT) or maybe nAT (natural AT). >>
I originally got this coin back in 1991. The coin was silver colored. It was sitting in a holder for years in a safe. Over the years the color got to how it is. I took the coin out in like 2003 when I noticed it had got colors.
Edited to add:
This was a cardboard year set holder. One of each type from 1935. It was in a plastic case after that. >>
Then the reverse should be similar. Let us see it. After all, you did say
<< <i>I want someone to show me another one like it. Please >>
The reverse ought to qualify, right?
Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."
BRdude....mirabela....can you help with a pic to prove I am talking nonsense----just ONE little itty bitty example would do....
Regardless of AT or NT it is a nice looking Buff that I would be happy to have in my collection if it were mine.
Thanks for sharing
Hoard the keys.
<< <i>Can you show me a pic of any of them so I can see how similar or dis-similar ("Admittadly they aren't toninig exactly like this one, (yet)") they are? >>
I said they aren't toning like that one is, not with irridescant colors (yet)
<< <i>BRdude....mirabela....can you help with a pic to prove I am talking nonsense----just ONE little itty bitty example would do.... >>
I don't have means to post a pic or I would be glad to. I never said you were talking nonsense, I merely disagree with you like you did mirabela. I myself don't believe that to be an AT pattern of toning as I have seen them toned like that before. JMHO
the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed
Join the NRA and protect YOUR right to keep and bear arms
To protest against all hunting of game is a sign of softness of head, not soundness of heart. Theodore Roosevelt
[L]http://www.ourfallensoldier.com/ThompsonMichaelE_MemorialPage.html[L]
I am not saying that Bruceswar did anything suspicious to this coin first off.
As I have been told by some real top numismatists--album toning takes time and moves across the surface of the metal. When it moves across a nice open field it travels if you will in a nice concentric way, but when it hits a device--like a letter--- it now has to move UP and OVER and AROUND that device as it progresses. Normally it would not show such a nice concentric toning band when viewed from above.
Here are some nice examples of album toning as an example---I know these are silver pieces, but the basic oxidation/toning process is broadly similar.
Notice how the devices show a DEFLECTION of the toning pattern?
The more wear on a coin the less symmetry on the color breaks also due to the UNEVENNESS if you will of the worn metal.
I hope I am making sense here and just want to help some of our younger members know what to look for and what to avoid.
I hope some REAL toning pro's could jump in to agree OR disagree with my thoughts.
Apropos of the coin posse/aka caca: "The longer he spoke of his honor, the tighter I held to my purse."
edited to add, I didn't take your post as being meant to be obnoxious at all JR
the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed
Join the NRA and protect YOUR right to keep and bear arms
To protest against all hunting of game is a sign of softness of head, not soundness of heart. Theodore Roosevelt
[L]http://www.ourfallensoldier.com/ThompsonMichaelE_MemorialPage.html[L]
<< <i> Did the coin come with a reverse? May we see it? >>
I would like to see it too, but I wonder, what SHOULD it look like?? Could it be totally untoned?? Maybe toned like the obverse?? Just wondering...
the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed
Join the NRA and protect YOUR right to keep and bear arms
To protest against all hunting of game is a sign of softness of head, not soundness of heart. Theodore Roosevelt
[L]http://www.ourfallensoldier.com/ThompsonMichaelE_MemorialPage.html[L]
As for the reverse -- anyone with any experience with those little cardboard & plastic 5- or 6-coin year sets knows that the obverse and reverse do not always do the same thing. I have handled lots and lots of those things -- mostly early 60's US or Canadian year sets -- and there's a felt side and a smooth side to the holder, and the coins often come out looking markedly different. The felt (top) side is usually where the magic is. I recently sold a board member a 64 Kennedy out of one of them, for instance, just a normal choice BU coin except for the striking rainbow colors on the obverse. The reverse just had golden brown rim toning. I have seen many, many examples of this.
Bottom line, I guess, is that coin doctors are very good and they've got us justifiably nervous and doubtful -- but they do what they do in the first place because the various holders, albums, cabinets, tissue paper, and all the other storage means in use over the years can and do produce some very amazing "natural" toning on coins.
Now that I've said all of that -- as before, if you don't trust it, don't buy it. I would never counsel otherwise.
The order of the colors is in the proper progression as well: yellow, magenta, cyan (blue-green)...repeat.
On some bag toned Morgans, you will see that rainbow toning pattern move right across a single relief area such as the face, neck
or field. Therefore I don't know why it would be impossible for that pattern to show up on lettering with the same relief. Overall it does seem to show many of the characteristics of air transfer toning.
Now if you can spot that rainbow coloration in the recesses of
"Liberty" then that would support a liquid or gas type toning applied.
Who has the skill to paint those letters in that fashion without painting the areas around it in a similar fashion?
roadrunner
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This is not a shake a bake job.... 100% NT Roadrunner is right. I will get a reverse shot up soon.
As for me I say nice coin Bruce and cool NT toning! I sold a well circulated 32-D to a forum member a cuple of years ago with some nice color- I'll see if I can find some pictures of it. mike