An idea.

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by Detecto92, Jan 21, 2012.

  1. Detecto92

    Detecto92 Well-Known Member

    As much as I see rainbow toned coins sell for on eBay, we should all look through the local coin shops dollars, halves, etc looking for "monster toned" coins.

    I've see a $50 top morgan bring over $200 just because it had a rainbow tone.
     
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  3. james m. wolfe

    james m. wolfe New Member

    go for it,an tell us what you make on that idea
     
  4. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    What makes you think that most Coin Shops don't also have eBay accounts?

    What makes you think that Coin Dealers in Coin Shops don't know that rainbow toners bring premiums?

    Why are you using the term "We"?
     
  5. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    They are expensive in coin shops too. Naturally rainbow toned coins carry a huge premium. A $50 Morgan with beautiful natural rainbow toning is worth the $200 on today's market. Now, you have to be very careful because...with this huge toning craze many of the "monster toned" coins you see on eBay are artificially toned and are considered damaged by collectors.

    There really isn't a quick way to make a big profit on coins...unfortunately.
     
  6. 19Lyds

    19Lyds Member of the United States of Confusion

    And thats the truth!
     
  7. Fall Guy

    Fall Guy Active Member

    And to hijack the thread for a second, how do they artificially tone the coins. (Not that I want to use this method, just curious how it's done.)
     
  8. icerain

    icerain Mastir spellyr

    Toned coins will add a premium to the price depending on how toned the coin really is. Some people like it some don't. Collectors (like me) wouldn't mind paying a bit extra for a toned coin with nice eye appeal. And some collectors stay away from them like the plague.
    Store owners and dealers all know this. The only toned coins you will find for cheap are low grade ones.
     
  9. JCB1983

    JCB1983 Learning

    I've been working in a pawnshop and handle all of the coins/eBay. I seperate the toned coins and everything will eventually make it to eBay. We have to maximize profits (within reason..Buyers dictate the market). I am selling regular rossies for about 1.75 and have seen some monster toned go for as much as 20 dollars. The sad thing is I have to crack open these rolls from the 1960's because of the toned premium.
     
  10. CamaroDMD

    CamaroDMD [Insert Clever Title]

    There are many ways...but I'm not an expert. I know there are some chemicals that can be used and heat can also be used as part of the process.
     
  11. Fall Guy

    Fall Guy Active Member

    Ah, ok. Figured it would be some type of chemical solution and the heat part is interesting but makes sense. I've seen an ebay seller selling monster toned state quarters and asking about $40-45 a piece for them. I knew they were artificial but wondered how he/she did it.
     
  12. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    How many can I buy, given that melt on them is currently $2.30, and they're consistently getting that or more on eBay (which, after fees on a reasonable lot size, would give me about $2.00 each)?
     
  13. -jeffB

    -jeffB Greshams LEO Supporter

    Well, there is -- take unfair advantage of people who know less than you.

    Bonus points, OP, when you realize that most dealers (and many folks on eBay) know more than you.
     
  14. medoraman

    medoraman Supporter! Supporter

    Lots of ways. Lots of bad ways, (easy to see they are AT), and a couple of "good" ways that most would never be able to know. AT used to be used to hide defects on a coins surface, so it wasn't used to create a premium but to hide a problem coin. However, the same methodology used on nice surface coins creates very pretty toning that really cannot be differentiated from natural.
     
  15. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    Sulpher is commonly used to AT silver coins.
     
  16. Fall Guy

    Fall Guy Active Member

    Hmm, interesting.

    That I've heard of. Just figured that would take a while compared to other methods.
     
  17. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    Heat can be used as a catalyst.
     
  18. rodeoclown

    rodeoclown Dodging Bulls

    I guess I'm not normal, I tend to avoid rainbow and toned coins in general. I like them blast white like they just came off the mint press or dirty and worn, like they're carrying a story with them.
     
  19. brewerbonsai

    brewerbonsai Member

    The rainbow coins defintely go for big $$$. The local coins shop search seems like a good idea. I also heard tobacco smoke direct towards silver coins can change the coloring, but I have never tried this. ALso heard to stuff the coin in potato w/ some olive oil & bake it the over for 30-45 mins, never done this either, but interesting.
     
  20. wooleytree

    wooleytree Operation Flamingo

    Sound delicious! Make mine with sour cream and chives.
     

  21. A good place to look for toned coins are in the old mint sets that contain any silver coins (1956-1970). Dealers do not typically have the time to keep checking these sets so you may pick up a nice toned coin with little or no premium above what the set is selling for at that time. TC
     
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