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Details Coins Curiosity Question

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Pillar of the Community
United States
5825 Posts
 Posted 02/17/2019  09:32 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add kanga to your friends list

Quote:
Has anyone ever deliberately purchased a details coin(raw or graded) strictly based on eye appeal?

On eye appeal?
No.

But I bought a raw coin because it is a scarce variety and I knew would be labeled DETAILS.
And I had it slabbed so that the variety attribution would be authenticated.
And, yes, it's now in a DETAILS holder.
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 Posted 02/17/2019  10:04 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add chafemasterj to your friends list
Great question.
Check out my counterstamped Lincoln Cent collection:
http://goccf.com/t/303507
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 Posted 02/17/2019  10:17 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add edweather to your friends list
Sure, some nice coins get overlooked because of "details," when the damage isn't that bad. You can have two coins with fine details, and one can be horrible, and one decent looking.
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 Posted 02/17/2019  10:35 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add muddler to your friends list
This one is in a details scratched PCGS holder, I found it attractive.

Details-Coins-Curiosity-Question

Details-Coins-Curiosity-Question
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 Posted 02/17/2019  10:46 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add NDBirdman to your friends list
To me, a details coin for my collection takes the place of a couple I could not afford otherwise. While alot of ppl look down their nose at them, I enjoy having them, they are still survivors from the melt pot, and they are still history regardless of how they were treated before I was born. To each his/her own!
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 Posted 02/17/2019  11:18 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add silverwolf to your friends list
yes I have also purchased, details/ cleaned and re-toned coins. and I am happy with them.
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United States
18456 Posts
 Posted 02/17/2019  12:06 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add T-BOP to your friends list
If you need a specific coin to complete a set and It's in a details holder ,then why not go for it if the price is right .As long as the coin has a decent eye appeal .
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 Posted 02/17/2019  8:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add SilverDollar2017 to your friends list
It all depends on whether you like the eye appeal and price.
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 Posted 02/17/2019  9:03 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add thq to your friends list
In trading with seated specialists for decades, I've bought and sold a lot of details coins. For instance, early San Francisco pieces are scarce and motley. I'd guess that at least 75% of them are details coins, for every possible reason. Very few of them are what anyone would consider appealing. They're collected for their history and scarcity.
"Two minutes ago I would have sold my chances for a tired dime." Fred Astaire
Edited by thq
02/17/2019 9:05 pm
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 Posted 02/17/2019  10:57 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add one_fine_dime to your friends list
Yes, and I swore I wouldn't do it, but then, eventually, just figured, what the heck - due to eye appeal and the fact that this issue is typically fraught with a week reverse strike. I picked up a raw AU50ish 1923-S Mercury dime for the price of a VF25 (at one-fifth the price based on graysheet). The obverse mostly took the hit, a barrage of hairlines. I may place it in the kitchen window sill to see how it tones in time.
Details-Coins-Curiosity-Question
Details-Coins-Curiosity-Question


There was a funny comment I came across in a recent CDN blog entry called "3 Fast Ways To Lose Money Buying Coins", with number 2 being "Buy cleaned or damaged coins" (number 1 is "Don't check for authenticity of coins" and number 3 is "Pay more than you should"
http://blog.greysheet.com/3-fast-wa...uying-coins/

"Cleaned or Damaged coins". stop the madness! I collect hammered and early machined European, United States, and other 16th through 19th century coins. If you purchased a 100-year-old automobile, you would expect it to have been cleaned and to have some damage. Same way with antique toys, artwork, stamps, sports cards, pinbacks, documents, pictures, photos, etc. But do coin collectors expect these antiques to have never been cleaned or have some damage? Obviously, coin buyers and grading companies do. That is why most of the coins I have submitted, even with the lightest cleaning and slight damage from circulation, come back with a "Details" grade. Get a life people.and don't bother to collect anything else that might be found in a museum or "history house", because, heaven forbid, someone might have dropped or cleaned it in the last hundred years!

Edited by one_fine_dime
02/17/2019 11:01 pm
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 Posted 02/18/2019  01:09 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add kbbpll to your friends list
I have bought a couple raw recently where the seller declares "details" or "cleaned" and it's really not, or not enough to have influenced my decision because it was the variety I was after. Lack of luster can be misinterpreted as over-dipped when a year/mint is notorious for so-so luster, or excessive polishing lines mistaken for cleaning, etc. Not strictly for eye appeal though.
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 Posted 02/18/2019  01:17 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jimbucks to your friends list
Yes. These can be a good option for 7070 albums to assure a coin is genuine. Especially for Trade dollars.
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 Posted 02/18/2019  08:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add T-BOP to your friends list
Come to think of it I have a few raw detail coins in my possession that I bought a long time ago because they were old
( early 1800's ), had a ton of history behind them and price was cheap with a decent eye appeal .
CCF Advertiser
United States
1533 Posts
 Posted 02/18/2019  1:17 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Andrew99 to your friends list
I have bought details coins and cracked them out. If the details grade is due to rim bumps or "damage" and the damage looks old, like it was contemporaneous, then the coin will often sell raw at a grade back. In a details holder it will go 2-3 grades back at times.
New Member
United States
47 Posts
 Posted 02/18/2019  4:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add xlrcable to your friends list
I don't mind chopmarks (within reason) so I've bought a few coins detailed for that.
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