Awesome Results!!! (Before and after pics included)

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by the_man12, Mar 24, 2009.

  1. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    I was really happy how this worked. I first soaked it in vinegar which made the verdigris thinner. Then I used Dellar's Darkener to make it darker to hide the verdigris even more. I don't have any Verdi-Gone so I couldn't just use that. There is still a spot on his(/her???) head by the L in LIBERTY. It doesn't really bother me as the rest of the coin looks so much better.

    Not really sure how it happened but the after pictures are first.

    Grades?
     

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  3. tmoneyeagles

    tmoneyeagles Indian Buffalo Gatherer

    It is an princess wearing a feathered headband...So that should answer your question about gender.
    Now for the coin, itself, I'm amazed, you cleaned a coin good! I tell ya!
    See what NGC does to it...lol

    Very nice!
     
  4. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    Thanks. I too never thought I'd see the day...
     
  5. tmoneyeagles

    tmoneyeagles Indian Buffalo Gatherer

    Now it worth a whole lot, BUT, you made the coin purty
     
  6. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    Haha I never really planned on selling it.
     
  7. tmoneyeagles

    tmoneyeagles Indian Buffalo Gatherer

    In 100 years, that will be worth something! :)
     
  8. TheNoost

    TheNoost huldufolk

    Time will tell on if VD returns or not. Let us know how it works out.
     
  9. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    It's really too bad isn't it? I'm not sure if I even want to be around that long.:)
     
  10. xtrmbrdr

    xtrmbrdr Senior Member

    I'd like to see a 'magnified and highlighted' pic of the verdigris area to see if there is "pitting" showing in that area?
     
  11. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    Yep we'll see. I guess I would just repeat the process if it does.
     
  12. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    Click on the picture a few times to zoom in. There is no pitting.
     
  13. bqcoins

    bqcoins Olympic Figure Skating Scoring System Expert

    it looks better than it did.
     
  14. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

    Hummm....looks are deceiving, lol. The verdigris is still there, it's just absorbed some of the sulfur in the darkener.

    I'll say it once again, if you guys use vinegar you're feeding the verdigris (copper acetate). Vinegar contains acetic acid, which is responsible for the temporary chemical reaction with the verdigris. However, it also supplies more food for the verdigris (acetate radicals).
     
  15. SNemecek

    SNemecek New Member

    Verdi-gone would have done a much better job without damaging the rest of the coin. It looks like a lightly dipped coin to me. I think it has more problems now but it looks cleaner.
     
  16. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    I agree with you. The thing is, vinegar costs $2 and Verdi-Gone is a bit pricey. I would usually just not buy a coin with damage like this, but I got it for a dollar and it is in VF so I wanted to experiment.
     
  17. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    I agree it looks better than it did before, but you can still see the corrosion and damage. I have not tried anything like this.
     
  18. BadThad

    BadThad Calibrated for Lincolns

    Remember...you can freely dilute VERDI-GONE™ with distilled water, 8-oz can go a LONG way. ;)
     
  19. the_man12

    the_man12 Amateur Photographer

    Well I'm not buying any more coins like this so it would be a waste now. I believe it is a good product at a decent price, but I don't need it.
     
  20. Leadfoot

    Leadfoot there is no spoon

    I am glad you have come to this realization. I truly believe it will benefit you (and the rest of numismatics)....Mike
     
  21. snaz

    snaz Registry fever

    I really don't think this coin has been helped.
    Sure it looks better, but as you said, you used darkener to hide the rest of hte verdigris.
    Hiding verdigris isn't the main goal when your attempting to "clean" a coin. Getting rid of it is the goal. The way I look at it is if I can get rid of the verdigris and be left with a but ugly coin, I am still happy. Having it come out with an appealing look is just a bonus. I say you should tackle it again, but please, don't use vinegar.
     
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