AgReE oR DiSaGrEe////////////////The ERA of natural toning is OVER

I say...the ERA of Natural Toning is OVER
Slabs protect the coin, The atmosphere is cleaner and free from sulfur pollutants,No more Wayte Raymond Albums or paper envelopes, no more velvet lined cabinet trays....... People are TOO impatient.
Slabs protect the coin, The atmosphere is cleaner and free from sulfur pollutants,No more Wayte Raymond Albums or paper envelopes, no more velvet lined cabinet trays....... People are TOO impatient.
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Sure it's Darkside, but its my most recent obvious NT pickup.
I mean.....coins of TODAY will never tone like coins of the past century.
"I say...the ERA of Natural Toning is OVER"
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Not as long as Taco Bell has brown napkins!!
~
"America suffers today from too much pluribus and not enough unum.".....Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
Agreed, brother.
I think the era of natural toning ended when the brothers realized a fortune could be made quickly by jazzing up coins.
<< <i>Not what I meant.
I mean.....coins of TODAY will never tone like coins of the past century. >>
Gotcha. I will still take the opposite side though.
I have Dansco Albums with Modern coins that are not in slabs, I am sure I am not alone. I do see your point, but you never know, in the future, there may be some new way to test for natural vs. artificial toning.
<< <i>I mean.....coins of TODAY will never tone like coins of the past century. >>
Well this little modern W is developing a nice tan
<< <i>No more Wayte Raymond Albums or paper envelopes, no more velvet lined cabinet trays....... >>
NONE of those is "natural" anyway, so your theory makes no sense. those all cause ARTIFICIAL tone.
the natural place for most coins to appear is in circulation, so as long as coins continue to circulate, you'll still see lots of them w/ "natural tone".
K S
and they're cold.
I don't want nobody to shoot me in the foxhole."
Mary
Best Franklin Website
<< <i>Remind me again when the coin collecting community agreed on what is natural toning? >>
Many new collectors of modern coins assemble coins from circulation and place them in albums.
Not to mention what others have said about the coins in proof sets that are toning in the holder.
Scott
Toned Coins for sale @ tonedcointrader.com
<< <i>I mean.....coins of TODAY will never tone like coins of the past century. >>
They will, but they will always suspected of being intentionally toned by people trying to "add value" to their coins rather than simply being the pleasant result of serendipity.
Is a coin sitting on a desk toning naturally or artificially???
No napkin, no noxious underwear drawer, no propane involved. Just sleeping on a desk.....
<< <i>Id strongly say NT on that on. >>
I agree...BUT I bet if I sent the above ASE to be holdered it would get BB'd as AT
Been there...done that
Anytime I see an ASE with electric toning, I want to puke.
No offense to those that collect toned bullion. But its not for me in the least. And while I would still call that NT, its not the tradition NT that develops over time.
Also, I doubt theyd bag it. Seems like the toned ASE's have a golden pass to the NT & AT debate with the graders.
<< <i>
<< <i>Remind me again when the coin collecting community agreed on what is natural toning? >>
its pretty simple, if a coin is where it naturally belongs, then it gets toned naturally. if it is put somewhere where it would'nt naturally go, then whatever happens to it is artificial
albums are NOT where coins inteded for circulation are intended to go, so if they are put there & get toned, the toning is artificial.
the concept is incredibly simple, it is hard to screw up.
K S
<< <i>its not the tradition NT that develops over time. >>
It has been sitting on my desk for 18 months.....with the color developing over time...it has never even made me nauseous
I just like it 'cuz it's a tad different than the invisible ones sitting in boxes in my safe
The name is LEE!
<< <i>I mean.....coins of TODAY will never tone like coins of the past century. >>
I partially agree and partially disagree. Many of the coins of today will not tone the same way, for a number of reasons:
One, the ones kept by collectors today are housed differently than in the old days, as you mentioned (i.e., no Wayte Raymond holders, etc.).
Two, today's coins are mostly made of different materials than the old ones (i.e., most are of copper-nickel alloy instead of silver).
Three, the precious-metal coinage of today (gold and silver) doesn't circulate in commerce, so even those are not as likely to drastically change over time.
That being said, the coins of today WILL tone. Not all of them will be slabbed or set aside, and even the ones that are protectively housed may change subtly over long periods of time.
So yes, I agree... mostly. But disagree a little bit, too.
<< <i>BTW, PCGS slabs are far from air tight. I have had modern gold coins target tone inside the PCGS slabs. >>
I have to ask - how does a .9999 fine gold coin target tone?
<< <i>
<< <i>BTW, PCGS slabs are far from air tight. I have had modern gold coins target tone inside the PCGS slabs. >>
I have to ask - how does a .9999 fine gold coin target tone?
My guess is residue from whatever rinse the mint uses. The get a burnt orange toning.
am still buying and using them.
Hmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm,
bob
<< <i>
these are naturally toned since the mint intended for them to be there. but the mint did'nt intend for people to shove coins into wayte raymond holders, so such induced toning is totally artificial.
K S
<< <i>
<< <i>
these are naturally toned since the mint intended for them to be there. but the mint did'nt intend for people to shove coins into wayte raymond holders, so such induced toning is totally artificial.
K S >>
THAT is a cool set!
I just got a 57 proof set and there is nothing better than a classic look.
Collecting and Appreciating Naturally Toned Coins, Part 1
Part 2 -- recently published
become a lot like the natural
blonds we find in California.
Camelot
"Keep your malarkey filter in good operating order" -Walter Breen
and they tone... which to me is not natural as the mint did not intend
for them to go that route.
if you buy coins from the mint in rolls and one ends up being an end
roll toner... well then.. that is natural toning to me if it sat in a normal
environment for however many years. normal being in a home, bank,
etc...
Not downstairs on your hot water heater :-| but one would never know
and that is the problem with coin docs.
<< <i>I say...the ERA of Natural Toning is OVER >>
I don't know about that... but I'd wager that the ERA (Earned Run Average) for the coin docs ain't what it used to be...
Points I had in mind......Coins today are mostly clad, nickel or copper plated zinc. None of these will ever tone to the spectacular degree that Morgans, MS half dimes, or MPLs show up with. Most collector coins today (and beginning twenty years ago...hence "era") are encapsulated and in theory will NOT tone naturally any more. Bullion silver coins are not subject the same atmosphere present during the 19th and early 20th century, which had a much different makeup than todays air, and are not stored in the same manner (wooden trays or Wayte Raymond albums).
The emphasis that 'collectors' place on fantastic rainbow colors...and the expertise that some have developed that will create these colors in an afternoon of clever work...have taken the helm from the slow natural process that caused that old MS half dime to get that spendid look.
<< <i>Nothing like an ancient thread dug up to rehash once again.
Points I had in mind......Coins today are ... >>
When I re-awakened this thread, I was thinking of coins minted before 1934, and the topic was ‘in the news’ again due to the publication of a three part series on CoinLink.com. There remain a great many pre-1934 coins that most experts would agree are naturally toned, and I am optimistic that most of them will remain so for the foreseeable future. I am curious as to how the contributors to this thread think that the concept of natural toning is defined and discussed in these three articles:
Collecting and Appreciating Naturally Toned Coins, Part 1
Collecting and Appreciating Naturally Toned Coins, Part 2
Collecting and Appreciating Naturally Toned Coins, Part 3
The toning has developed withing the past two years in a paper envelope (hard to see
but it's under the coin). Alongside a White Morgan for reference.
Beautiful medium deep golden toning.
I have several that have done this in various colors and some have stayed white and
I don't know what to attribute that too.
bob