Penny coloring

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Jakek1978, Jan 20, 2015.

  1. Jakek1978

    Jakek1978 New Member

    Hi all, I can for the most part grade a Pennies condition without a problem. But when it comes to the coloring I'm at a loss. I have been eyeballing a 1909 VDB at a local store. It's in excellent condition. They are asking for $65 for it, and I'm wondering if hell has frozen over. The say do to its red brown coloring that's why it's priced so high. My question is what type of price difference would coloring make off the red book value?
     
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  3. cpm9ball

    cpm9ball CANNOT RE-MEMBER

    I took a quick look at NGC's price guide, and according to pricing of $65, RD would be MS63, RB would be MS64 and BN would be MS65. Does that help?

    Chris
     
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  4. Treashunt

    Treashunt The Other Frank

    unless it is slabbed, or you are good at grading, pass.
     
  5. Jakek1978

    Jakek1978 New Member

  6. Lehigh96

    Lehigh96 Toning Enthusiast

    Is the coin a straight RD, RB, or BN or is it toned? Chris gave you the grades for each color designation to warrant the dealers price tag. But if the coin has attractive toning, you can throw the price guide in the trash. I sold this MS64 RB to Rick Tomaska's group for $150 a few years ago.

    [​IMG]
     
  7. Clutchy

    Clutchy Well-Known Member

    I cant remember where I saw this, but there was a copper cent photo chart, which showed approx. 15 coins, with this description.

    Red coins = 9% or less brown
    Red-Brown coins = 10% to 90% brown
    Brown coins = 9% red or less
     
  8. Clutchy

    Clutchy Well-Known Member

  9. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    But they are wrong at least according to PCGS and NGC.
    http://www.pcgs.com/Lingo/R
     
  10. Bart9349

    Bart9349 Junior Member

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  11. Coinguy56

    Coinguy56 Member

    Here is what always gets me. People can ask what ever they want for a coin, they have every right to. However, when you are looking at toned copper, going by just the grade on the slab or whether or not it's fully red or red-brown is not always the best thing to do. Some copper are toned more than others. As a result, people sometimes pay more or less, based on the eye appeal, rather than the grade. Put simply, you buy the coin, not the slab. Like Lehigh's example above, that is some beautiful toning. People pay more for toning like that. $65 doesn't sound too bad, but the eye appeal is almost always a factor in why that particular coin is priced the way it is.

    It applies to nearly everything.... A monster toned Morgan Dollar in MS-64 is usually more desirable and higher-priced than a non-toned frosted Morgan with the same grade.

    -Coinguy56
     
  12. Clutchy

    Clutchy Well-Known Member

    Ok. Then consider the first three coins as red, and the last three coins as brown.
     
  13. rlm's cents

    rlm's cents Numismatist

    FWIW, the biggest question I have is not whether it is 4% or 6% (either way), but just when red is dark enought to be called brown and vice versa.
     
  14. Jakek1978

    Jakek1978 New Member

    Thanks all, alot of great info
     
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