Grading books

Discussion in 'Coin Chat' started by nam71, Feb 11, 2009.

  1. nam71

    nam71 Member

    I need some help. Trying to figure out which grading book would be best. I read somewhere that Photograde was good. I found 5 different Photograde books on ebay. How do I know which one would be best? I need to learn enough about grading to protect myself when buying coins. Sonny
     
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  3. FreakyGarrettC

    FreakyGarrettC Wise young snail

    I got a free one from heritage.
     
  4. kanga

    kanga 65 Year Collector

    I personally use the A.N.A. Grading Standards for United States Coins.
     
  5. Tater

    Tater Coin Collector


    Ditto for me. Worth every cent you pay for it.
     
  6. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

    Ditto, Ditto....
     
  7. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    Ditto , ANA 6th Edition is the best way to go .
    rzage
     
  8. Hobo

    Hobo Squirrel Hater

    ANA Grading Standards is probably your best bet. Photograde is useful only for circulated coins.
     
  9. nam71

    nam71 Member

    Does the A.N.A Grading standards have pictures? What makes it better than others?
     
  10. green18

    green18 Unknown member Sweet on Commemorative Coins

  11. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    Yes it has pictures, but like all grading books the pictures suck. You will find it far easier to use the descriptions and your grading will be more accurate than they ever will going by pictures.
     
  12. rzage

    rzage What Goes Around Comes Around .

    It has pictures of every coin and grade , is probably used by more people and has other general information on grading .
    rzage:D
     
  13. 900fine

    900fine doggone it people like me

    ANA is great, but I don't find it useful for Mint State and Proof coins.

    In addition to ANA, I like "Grading US Coins" by Jim Halperin for MS coins.

    Personally, I don't care for Photograde. I remember when it first came out; it made quite a splash ! It replaced the old Brown & Dunn grading guide. I bet that thing is a collector's item right now.
     
  14. nam71

    nam71 Member

    Thanks people. I guess I will buy the A.N.A book. I hope its not true , what they say about teaching old dogs new tricks.
     
  15. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    nam the true wisdom is to buy all the grading books. Read all of them, study all of them - but you have to go beyond the books. You have to look at coins, thousands and thousands of coins. And all the while you are looking at the coin be applying all of the things you have gotten out of the books.

    And yes, you can teach old dogs ;)
     
  16. Cloudsweeper99

    Cloudsweeper99 Treasure Hunter

    I'm not really sure why grading books can't include good photos. Maybe it just costs too much. There would seem to be a market for a really good photo book.

    I like and use both Photograde and the ANA guide. It helps to have two sources because many grading situations just aren't as clear-cut as a single source might lead you to believe.
     
  17. AdamL

    AdamL Well-Known Member

    I don't know why there are no grading books with good pics either. But there aren't. Thats why I think the ANA book is better. Because you're pretty much going by the descriptions either way, and Photograde doesn't cover unc coins. I have, and use, both though.
     
  18. GDJMSP

    GDJMSP Numismatist Moderator

    I think part of reason there are no good pics in grading books is really quite simple. It's because they would have to print several pictures of each coin in each grade to have truly representative examples.

    Think about it, there just so many different reasons as to why a given coin is assigned any given grade. In some cases it can be lack of luster, in others it can be too many marks, in others it can be slight wear vs a weak strike. And then for each picture they would have to explain why this particular coin was XF for this reason or that reason.

    One picture is just not capable doing this. But a verbal description of generalized charcateristics for a given grade, coupled with experience & unserstanding of the grading process - is.
     
  19. Arizona Jack

    Arizona Jack The Lincoln-ator

    There is a new book, " Grading Coins by Photograph".....I have not seen it, but might be worth a try, it focus's on the internet and the new decade of internet pictures
     
  20. ksparrow

    ksparrow Coin Hoarder Supporter

    I bought the book (by Bowers) recently, and it is useful, with a lot of information beyond grading.Photos are decent. The ANA guide is my preference, because for the most part it has objective descriptions for the different grade levels, rather than always saying "further wear is seen" as one goes down the scale. I have heard that the early editions of Photograde have much better pictures, and the grading is a bit more conservative than in later issues. The PCGS guide has been of no help to me at all in grading coins, but it has other useful parts.

    In sum, I'd recommend the ANA Grading book, an early Photograde, and the Bowers book, and then proceed as recommended by GDJMSP above.
     
  21. andy21us

    andy21us Coin Hoarder

    Hello nam71 and welcome to the forum. By the way thanks for the PM it is always nice to have a fellow AF brother on the forum. Doug is right get as many books on grading as you can and read them all. Some of them read like T.O. and have pictures like them but there are a few good one out there. One of the better one you can get for free if you join Heritage Auction Site. When you join they will send you How to Grade U.S. Coins by James L. Halperin but you have to ask for it.
     
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