****Star*Designation****

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by mcarney1173, Oct 20, 2009.

  1. mcarney1173

    mcarney1173 Senior Member

    I think I know the answer but I wanted to ask anyway. Every coin that I've seen graded with the star designation. (Ex. MS65 *) was rainbow toned. Can a bright, white, uncirculated, lustrous coin get a star designation if it is extremely, eye-appealingly white?

    Basically, can the star only go to toned coins?
     
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  3. Lehigh96

    Lehigh96 Toning Enthusiast

    The star designation is predominantly issued to coins with attractive toning. However, it is not solely reserved for toned coins. Any coin with exceptional eye appeal can be awarded a star. Here is a recent example from the September Long Beach Signature Sale from Heritage.

    [​IMG]

    I actually wrote a thread about this topic a while ago. Give it a read, you may find it interesting.

    http://www.cointalk.com/t46534/
     
  4. raider34

    raider34 Active Member

    Yep, Lehigh's got it right. I've also seen a lot of PL Morgans with no toning that have the star designation. Imo most of those coins are either boarder line DMPL, or, one side is DMPL and the other is PL.

    Search results for: (From Heritage, I think there's 2 stars on the first page alone).
     
  5. mcarney1173

    mcarney1173 Senior Member

    Very interesting read, Lehigh. I have a Morgan coming tomorrow, I might send it to NGC, it looks star worthy:

    1884 CC VAM-2 MS 63 (ANACS)
     

    Attached Files:

  6. Lehigh96

    Lehigh96 Toning Enthusiast

    Which side is dmpl?

    BTW, ryan needs your contest entry.:D
     
  7. mcarney1173

    mcarney1173 Senior Member

    The slab just says PL. The reverse definently looks more prooflike than the obverse, at least from the seller pics.
     
  8. Lehigh96

    Lehigh96 Toning Enthusiast

    In order to get a star, one side would need to be DMPL with the other side PL.
     
  9. NMBSURFER1

    NMBSURFER1 Junior Member

    Do you think the star designation will evolve to what we have now for coins. Perhaps in the future we may see star 64, star 65, etc. Of course there are stars that are more appealing than others.,
     
  10. blu62vette

    blu62vette Member

    I agree with this. Coins with one side PL and one side DMPL sometimes get the star. I have seen one side DMPLS with a star sell for more than a DMPL of the same date and grade. Makes no sense. I have sold my star coins in the search for full DMPL's.
     
  11. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    First we had Unc, BU, Choince BU, and Gen BU.
    Then MS-60, MS-63, MS-65.

    Then we added all of the ones in between, and all the way to MS-70.

    Now we have *'s.

    And of course CAC's.

    So would you pay more for an MS-64*CAC?

    So, is that worth 65 Money?
    Or over ask 64 money?


    I would still hover around 63 money, still old fashioned, I guess.
     
  12. mark_h

    mark_h Somewhere over the rainbow

    :) It depends on the coin and what I think of it on what I will pay. Not someone else's opinion. :) Please note - this does not make me right, but I do so value my own opinion. :)
     
  13. vipergts2

    vipergts2 Jester in hobby of kings


    That's the best statement I have read in a long time.

    Appearance/basic grades are for collectors, stars and beans are for speculators. Let the flaming begin. :thumb:
     
  14. Phil Ham

    Phil Ham Hamster

    I want the first G3 coin with a star rating. You can barely read the date but you get a warm a fuzzy feeling whenever you look at the coin through a bright light and through the grime.
     
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