Let's see your newest acquisitions!

Discussion in 'US Coins Forum' started by H8_modern, Feb 25, 2011.

  1. coinguy-matthew

    coinguy-matthew Ike Crazy

    Is it clad or silver?
     
  2. Avatar

    Guest User Guest



    to hide this ad.
  3. bahabully

    bahabully Junior Member

    .. Stunning !
     
  4. WingedLiberty

    WingedLiberty Well-Known Member

    Elevation Chromatics (a term developed by a toned coin expert named Brandon Kelley) refers to how the color progression on some toned coins lay on a coin's surface over different "elevations" of the design. The lower "elevation" of the surface will be toned in one color while the higher "elevation" will be toned in another color. This is elevation chromatics.

    More info here: http://www.jhonecash.com/coins/tonedmorgans.asp

    The Morgan Silver Dollar shown below is one of the best examples of "elevation chromatics" I've ever seen ... an 1882-O Morgan (PCGS MS63 OGH) that I bought a few months ago. Take special note of the hot pink coloration, which appears to "flow like a liquid" covering the lower recesses of the coin design; and the surrounding "higher elevations" of the design are toned in green.

    [​IMG]
     
  5. MrCheeks

    MrCheeks Active Member

    Picked this up on eBay the other day. Adding it to my 1943-S collection. All I need now is a nice '43-S Merc

    . IMG_0873.jpg IMG_0874.jpg
     
  6. WingedLiberty

    WingedLiberty Well-Known Member

    The 1977-S Ike is Copper Nickel.
     
  7. dimeguy

    dimeguy Dime Enthusiast

    Thanks, WingedLiberty! Learned something new today!
     
  8. coinguy-matthew

    coinguy-matthew Ike Crazy

    I thought so i was even going to go out on a limb and say it, the yellow color around the rim is a dead giveaway. Beautiful coin....
     
  9. blu62vette

    blu62vette Member

  10. lonegunlawyer

    lonegunlawyer Numismatist Esq.

    Very nice! I cannot wait to post my new acquisition tomorrow.
     
  11. cciesielski01

    cciesielski01 Laced Up

    1976deisenhowerdollartype2.jpg 1976jefferson.jpg part of the mint sets i picked up this morning. i didnt realize how blurry the jefferson was until i had it blown up.. shows the toning really well however
     
  12. alicechaos

    alicechaos Junior Member

    1983 D and P Souviner Sets

    I'm wondering if the P set was picked from the bottom of a bag - the quarter seems a bit banged up. I'm still happy I found the sets! 1983-P full set b.jpg 1983D Full-Set.jpg 1983P svset2.jpg
     
  13. kookoox10

    kookoox10 ANA #3168546

    Looks like it was rolling around in circulation for a while. The 83's are a tough date though, individual mint state examples go for $15-20 unslabbed.
     
  14. brg5658

    brg5658 Well-Known Member

    If it's such a "slow process", why does it appear on your 35 year old Eisenhower? I'm not being polemical, I'm truly curious. Also, do you have any scientific evidence to back up many of your statements? For example, why is this pattern "practically impossible to reproduce artificially"? It would be nice to have Tom B's input on this process... While you give lots of opinions about its "rarity" and its "naturalness", I'd like to have some of the science as to the actual process -- beyond the explanation that it occurs "under very unique and special conditions".

    Cool coin Winged. I don't get too excited by Ike's, but that one is not the regular run-of-the-mill Ike. :thumb:
     
  15. WingedLiberty

    WingedLiberty Well-Known Member

    I just learned about elevation chromatics a few weeks ago after posting a morgan dollar on the PCGS Forum. An advanced collector provided me with the term and the link. I googled that term and could only find Brandon's reference, so it appears he coined the term. Happy reading!

    http://www.jhonecash.com/coins/tonedmorgans.asp

    My statement that this is difficult to cook was excerpted from his write-up -- but this is really all pretty new to me so please excuse any mis-statements on my part. Like most things there are probably always exceptions to the rule, but I just havent stumbled on them yet.

    If you uncover any additional information, please post as I would love to learn more about this, and there is just not that much info about it on the web (that I could find at least).
     
  16. cciesielski01

    cciesielski01 Laced Up

    1976eisenhowerdollartype2.jpg 1978deisenhowertype2.jpg 1978eisenhowerd.jpg a few more eisenhower images :)
     
  17. alicechaos

    alicechaos Junior Member

    Thanks for your input kookoox10! Still,it looks better than the average 1983 found in today's change! And the 1983 D quarter looks great.
     
  18. mackwork

    mackwork Caretaker of old coins & currency

    "elevation chromatics" is better than the average made up term. :)

     
  19. bsowa1029

    bsowa1029 Franklin Half Addict

    This is 2 different shots of the same coin. It's a toned Morgan I picked up at a show a couple weeks ago. It's got some pretty decent toning on it, I just failed miserably at capturing it--especially on the obverse.

    1880 Morgan.jpg 1880 Morgan v2.jpg
     
  20. bsowa1029

    bsowa1029 Franklin Half Addict

    Here's another Morgan, I just picked this one up today. While it is pretty scuffed up, the obverse is semi-PL which is what made me buy it, plus the fact that the LCS I got it at didn't have any Franklins that caught my eye.


    1878 S Morgan.jpg
     
  21. robec

    robec Junior Member

    A couple of recent eBay pickups.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
Draft saved Draft deleted

Share This Page