Clean dry hands are a far better option than using gloves.
Just only hold the coin by its edges and you won't do it any harm whatsoever ( How do you think a coin grader holds your coin when assessing in at PCGS/NGC) If you use gloves there is a very real chance you will drop it.
If you don't want to touch the coin just open one end of a saflip and use the other end to scoop it up and it will slide into the open pocket with ease and won't harm the coin.
Push in albums are ok for circulated low value coins But they will eventually ruin any nice coin over time because they offer little or NO protection to the coins.
All my coins go into saflips/2x2's then are stored in archival quality binders that I store Flat.
The coins that I have in slabs are stored in the "Blue Boxes" supplied by PCGS, In special pages that hold slabs then stored in archival binders again I also have a few of the nice "lighthouse" wooden boxes designed to hold slabs.
I cannot fathom why some people worry about how to handle a coin and then put it into a push in album because if stored in this manner it will get damaged anyway.
If you truly care about your coins then clean dry hands to handle them and use the appropriate storage system is the best way to ensure that they suffer NO damage
Just only hold the coin by its edges and you won't do it any harm whatsoever ( How do you think a coin grader holds your coin when assessing in at PCGS/NGC) If you use gloves there is a very real chance you will drop it.
If you don't want to touch the coin just open one end of a saflip and use the other end to scoop it up and it will slide into the open pocket with ease and won't harm the coin.
Push in albums are ok for circulated low value coins But they will eventually ruin any nice coin over time because they offer little or NO protection to the coins.
All my coins go into saflips/2x2's then are stored in archival quality binders that I store Flat.
The coins that I have in slabs are stored in the "Blue Boxes" supplied by PCGS, In special pages that hold slabs then stored in archival binders again I also have a few of the nice "lighthouse" wooden boxes designed to hold slabs.
I cannot fathom why some people worry about how to handle a coin and then put it into a push in album because if stored in this manner it will get damaged anyway.
If you truly care about your coins then clean dry hands to handle them and use the appropriate storage system is the best way to ensure that they suffer NO damage

























