I learned my lesson about assuming anyting, so i found yet another person offering just toned coins on ebay, and I asked if they were manually toning them. They say they inherited them from their grandfather. I just have a hard time when every single one is toned, no matter what year or denomination, mostly all new; https://www.ebay.com/sch/beachegrl1...tfcAAOSwxCVgT6A7&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l2562 What say you?
I was under the impression it took years to get a round tone from those cardboard books. A 2006 nickel? Hmmmm
I been putting coins in Whitman’s since the 1960’s.... Oh yeah they do tone. Never had one turn into a neon blacklight before. Scuzzy black, yes. Never neon.
Its blasphemous to do this to coins here's a funny ebay toner I found. 2020 D, straight out of pappys collection https://www.ebay.com/itm/2020-D-Jefferson-US-Nickel-Uncirculated-Beautifully-Toned-Coin/154133911541 https://www.ebay.com/itm/1900-US-Mo...irthday-Gift-Gold-Toned-Art-Coin/154369620689
Depends on the coin. I’ve had coins really colorfully tone in a couple days just sitting on a desk while the coin next to it was unchanged. Some coins just seem to tone while others never really do for whatever reason.
Look I have 2006S proof sets, the coins don't look like that, nowhere near that for toning, it's 15 years old and toned up the same as the 52 year old quarter. The 1958D nickel in the slab looks legit though not gonna lie. but that's what artificial toning people will do, show you a legit one that's been graded to rest your mind, and sell you the oven baked coins. Honestly, toning in general doesn't look like any of those pictures, the seller is enhancing the colors or something in the pictures to make the toning "pop"unnaturally in the pics. That's not on accident AT ALL. the colors will be far more muted to the eye on any of them. blurry slab picture as proof, but crystal clear pictures of the coins they are selling. I'd stay away from it. it's not being honest in general if nothing else.
One of games scammers play on the Internet is to claim that "They inherited these coins from their grandpa.” In some cases, their grandpa would have had to have been from China or been ripped off continuously with counterfeits before they died. Take the "came from an estate" claim with a grain of salt.
Even if she may have inherited them, apparently she didn’t say if it was her or her “grandfather” that was/is the chemist.