CoinWeek: Toned Morgan Dollars of the Northern Lights Collection, Part 1 - 4K Video
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- Опубліковано 14 лис 2024
- CoinWeek and Legend Rare Coin Auctions partner up to bring you a spectacular array of dazzling toned Morgan dollars from the Northern Lights Collection. These toned coins are what coin collecting at the ultra high end is all about. Each of these coins has been graded by PCGS and is CAC certified.
Part I of the collection will be offered for sale at a Public Auction held September 29, 2016 at the PCGS Members Only Show at the Venetian in Las Vegas. You can register and bid on these coins online by signing up at Legend Rare Coin Auctions' website: www.legendauctions.com.
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Such an excellent quote to start the video! Thanks for that, and the knowledge on the coins -- I had wondered why coins toned! The Northern Lights graphics in the background was great, too!
Nice collection, but not much time to appreciate the coins before the image was split or otherwise disrupted. Thanks for the effort though.
great video. nice coins trippy music lol
Interesting story!👍
Helpful for all stackers or collectors!👌
I think we should all help each other!❤
Nice Coins!🤩
&
Nice Vid!👏
Is there a way to tell if the toning is natural or man made?
Check out www.jhonecash.com theres an extensive guide explaining toning gl
Hola , Yo tengo una Morgan 1897 O pesa 20,4grs. Su diámtro es 38.75 y su espesor 2.43. Tiene valor ?
Smokers!
Is the toned coloration permanent? or will it darken further or change colors? I hate to pay $200 for a PCGS Morgan and 20 years later it turns dark or brown. Has anyone had one of these for 20 years or more?
theyuha how I understand it for the pretty, toned coins it takes certain conditions, like a sulfur or acid source, like a mint bag, or an old paper coin roll or old envelope making contact with the surface of the coin and some humidity, light moisture and heat...and a lot of time in those conditions untouched for the toning to occur.
Graded and slabbed, while the slab isn't airtight, would dramatically slow to even almost stop the toning process. There won't be surface contact with bag or paper anymore, humidity could be a factor but you could store with desiccant to remove humidity. Nothing completely stops it, it's a natural process.
Natural toning is a really long process, decades. Even some of the older mint sets in the original cellophane tone. Natural toning won't hurt the value of a coin anywhere near as much as cleaning the coin would hurt the value. If it toned well, it should continue to tone well until the toning goes dark, but even then the original luster would still be visible through the layer of toning.
Not so on a cleaned coin. Once you've stripped it of its luster by cleaning you can't get that back, it will always look dull, even if rainbow toned after cleaning.
I've heard of people taking slabbed coins and put them in air tight containers with silica packets and the silica packets gone 10+ years without needing to be changed out for a new one, and the coin hasn't toned further, while others remained 100% white.
Even if it did go dark blue or brown with enough time even black it would still be a lustrous dark blue or brown or black light coating on a surface of the coin and not "dirt" or "mud" or grease or something like that.
The pretty, toned coins remain pretty for a really long time, I've never seen one turn bad.
From what I've seen if the start bad they stay bad, and if they start good they stay good and the colors just get stronger and stronger if allowed to continue to tone in that manner and pace.
If you have doubts about it, maybe it ain't for you. But as I said it's going to happen to all coins if given enough time and you don't clean them, or keep them in an air tight container without humidity, sulfur or acid, paper, plastic, ect. Ect. You can slow it to a crawl with careful storage.
Most of the Morgan dollars that trade well with pretty toning sat in vaults in bags for 50+ years untouched and forgotten.
Bags of blast white Morgans were found in the 1960s and 1970s that were sitting at the mint since the late 1800s in bags. So yes, if it is possible for Morgans to remain blast white for 60-80 years, you can imagine that you can make the toning process so slow you won't notice much change during your lifetime.
Enjoying
drool!!!!!!!
Silverino
Dis price morgan sale😳😳
can it be done in the lab ? buy good BU morgans and tone them in the lab to sell them for multiple grands? lol
There is no market for "artificially" toned coins. Grading companies can easily tell the difference from "Naturally" toned coins & indicate that on their tables rendering them relatively worthless...... the same way they would a cleaned coin.
Sir I have morgan dollar 1898.
to bad I can't play 4k on my phone and my PC keeps buffering
So much unnecessary premium
THAT quality of NATURAL toning is EXTREMELY rare!! That kind of rarity & beauty make them extremely COLLECTABLE. From the beginning of time, humans collect things. It's in our nature. Humans place value on beautiful &/or rare objects... & therefor are willing to pay premiums for it.
To say, "so much unnecessary premium" is in denial of our nature... & they way things are.
Speak for yourself. Beauty has value.