eBay's latest high-volume coin vandal

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by -jeffB, Feb 23, 2016.

  1. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    I'm seeing more and more BIN listings from a particular seller that appear to be atrociously AT. In fact, instead of calling out most of their inventory as "artificially toned", they actually tag a small subset of their coins as "naturally toned". I'm even skeptical of some of those, like this recently-sold one:

    1986-S BU PROOF Washington Quarter From Mint Set Natural Rainbow Color Toned P42

    Judging from the seller's completed auctions, they're apparently selling like hotcakes. I guess that's appropriate, because they look like they're fresh off the griddle.

    Sigh...
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. ddddd

    ddddd Member

    Plenty of those can be said to be questionable, but some of these are now getting graded as problem-free coins. Maybe the correct listing title should be market acceptable instead of naturally toned.
     
  4. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    What is sad to me, and I have said it all along since toning became popular, is how many perfectly nice coins are ruined to create fake toning. Collectors should prize pristine surfaces, not the color. Pristine surface coins have always carried a premium. However, many of these from the 19th century came with toning. I think somewhere along the way new collectors confused what was desirable. Its the SURFACES that are desirable, not necessarily the toning.

    Now people just destroy coins by frying them. They can't even make decent fake toning. Pathetic.
     
    Paul M., afantiques and JPeace$ like this.
  5. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Cooked, juiced, but no one got hurt........right?
     
  6. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Unless you're on the receiving end.......
     
    JPeace$ likes this.
  7. Markus1959

    Markus1959 Well-Known Member

    A "proof" coin from a "mint set" - OK!
     
    Coinchemistry 2012 likes this.
  8. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Well, proof sets are made by the Mint, right? :rolleyes:

    Calling proof sets "mint sets", and vice versa, isn't too uncommon on the Bay. Sometimes it can lead to bargains, as people searching for one miss listings that claim to advertise the other. Usually, though, it's just more noise.
     
  9. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Geeze. I just checked new BIN listings, and of the last 25 new listings, 19 belong to this seller.

    It's like I'm trying to pick up a couple of nice chocolates at the store, and this one worker keeps dumping buckets of candy corn into the bins.

    Edit: Batter-dipped, sugar-frosted candy corn.
     
    Last edited: Feb 23, 2016
    silentnviolent, green18 and harris498 like this.
  10. dltsrq

    dltsrq Grumpy Old Man

    Compared to this 1968-D for $8,812.50, the OP coin seems like a bargain.
     
    paddyman98 likes this.
  11. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

    This guy has been at it for some time. The number of toned coins with one owner would be enough to keep my wallet pocket firmly buttoned.
     
    silentnviolent and Kasia like this.
  12. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    I have to disagree with this. The surfaces obviously matter, but it is quite clear from prices fetched with the right colorful toning on Morgans and ASEs ect that the toning is absolutely what the buyers are chasing and what matters to them.
     
  13. fretboard

    fretboard Defender of Old Coinage!

    Terrible looking toned crapus! Ripoff sleaze!
     
  14. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    It is now, but when toned coins first started bringing good prices it was because collectors were appreciating the original, undipped surfaces dripping with luster. It simply got perverted IMHO into color means its worth more over the last decade or two.
     
    silentnviolent and atcarroll like this.
  15. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    That is probably true with how much things were getting dipped for the blast white look back in the day.

    The right color for sure. They certainly have a look they prefer where the sky is the limit when two toned collectors want the same item.
     
  16. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    I would mainly agree sir. However, I would point out that the reason coins were dipped white was to prove there was no damage under the toning. I believe toned coin collectors would be shocked how much damage is hiding under some toned coins. Any black toning is suspect, and matte black toning I can almost guarantee damage. Not to even talk about known damage that a coin was intentionally retoned to hide.
     
  17. baseball21

    baseball21 Well-Known Member

    You may be correct about that someone else will have to dispute that if they choose too.

    I definitely agree for newer collectors or collectors just entering the toning market. I would say the base of the toning market is aware though and just not overly concerned about that aspect within reason. The eye appeal is clearly what they are going for over technical grades when 200 dollar coins can turn into 4k dollar coins from the right look.

    I don't mind dark toning as much as most people do. If its from the 1900s on I hate it, but there are a lot of dark seated liberties I find to be pleasing to the eye
     
  18. rooman9

    rooman9 Lovin Shiny Things

  19. PennyGuy

    PennyGuy US and CDN Copper

    That listing clearly says "fluid", but the description says

    "NATURAL COIN TONING FLUID Whenever you need to nicely tone a badly cleaned or stripped silver dollar just put it next to my toning bottle inside a container and before long the tone begins to form . . Nothing touches your coin , toning is the metals natural reaction to the organic ( not chemical ) toning gasses released from the bottle . . The toning gasses are just a concentrated form of the metal toning gasses in the natural atmosphere . . A bottle will last for at least a months continual use and many coins can be treated".
     
  20. Santinidollar

    Santinidollar Supporter! Supporter

  21. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    I wonder if you could do that with 'crazy glue'? It sure as heck would bring up the fingerprints........ devil.gif
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page