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Fingerprints On Coins ... Odd?

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Pillar of the Community
upstate's Avatar
United States
3283 Posts
 Posted 11/13/2011  12:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add upstate to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I knew I was sitting in front of a computer and could just look it up,
instead I just went from memory, I was wrong, it's cerumen
Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts
 Posted 11/14/2011  12:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
The real reason no fingerprints on all coins is due to almost everyone now using Latex gloves all day. Then too many wear other types of gloves to keep their fingers warm.
Others wash all the coins in their pockets each night.
And remember that dead people don't give off those oils and acids on their fingers either. Coins in your pocket get rubbed all the time by cloth.
So if you eliminate people wearing gloves, dead people, coin washing people, coins left in cloths and put into a washing machine, few coins get fingerprints.
And of course with all the adds today about stopping germ spreading by using those germ things in almost every store, even less prints.
At this rate a coin with a finger print will be worth more.
Valued Member
Foolsgold's Avatar
United States
220 Posts
 Posted 11/14/2011  1:32 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Foolsgold to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
"it puts the lotion in the basket"


... name that movie


"It puts the lotion on the skin or else it gets the hose again"

Silence of the lambs

Valued Member
silversam's Avatar
United States
58 Posts
 Posted 11/14/2011  2:20 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add silversam to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
Quote:
"it puts the lotion in the basket"


... name that movie


"It puts the lotion on the skin or else it gets the hose again"

Silence of the lambs


Or joe dirt lol
Pillar of the Community
stevex6's Avatar
3352 Posts
 Posted 11/14/2011  5:05 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add stevex6 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Yup => Nicely done, Foolsgold

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stevex6's Avatar
3352 Posts
 Posted 11/14/2011  5:11 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add stevex6 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
just carl => wow, you may be correct!? I'm gonna try to sell a few coins on the web, as

=> Mint State, with possible "celebrity-fingerprints"



trout1105 => I'm not exactly sure if an Asian stripper counts as a celebrity, but there would probably be a niche-market for your dirty stripper coins as well?
Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts
 Posted 11/14/2011  7:51 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add just carl to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply

Quote:
=> Mint State, with possible "celebrity-fingerprints"

They just had a dress worn by Marilyn Monroe in a movie on the Antique Road Show for hundreds of thousands of dollars. SO imagine a coin with her fingerprints on it. Actually I wonder why there isn't a lot of so called famous people's fingerprints on coins on ebay all the time.
Another one on the show called History Detectives was about a coin that might have been shot by Annie Oakly.
Could start another entire new type of coin collecting.
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Sap's Avatar
Australia
16830 Posts
 Posted 11/15/2011  08:35 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
In an attempt to drag this thread kicking and screaming back to the original question...

Quote:
why doesn't every single coin in your wallet have nasty fingerpint-marks riddled all over them?

They do. They don't have a "whole bunch" of nice clean sharp fingerprints because more than a couple of fingerprints overlap to produce an overall broken-lustre effect.

It's like footprints on a beach. If it's a beach where there's only ever been one person walking on it, it's easy to see only one set of footprints, nice and clear. Two or three footprints are still easy enough to track, though it might get confusing in places. A couple of dozen people or more and the sand just becomes cratered with overlapping footprints to the extent that you can't really see any distinct sets of footprints at all.

Quote:
so the flip-side is => it's better to handle your coins a "whole bunch", rather than just once!?

We coin collectors have a word for that. It's called "wear". We collectors generally don't like wear, whether it's mechanical wear from friction or chemical wear from reacting with fingerprint oil.

It's not the actual fingerprint that causes permanent damage, it's the chemical reaction between the slightly acidic fingerprint oil and the metal of the coin's surface that causes the problem. Which is why it's recommended that, if you know you've accidentally put a fingerprint on a coin, wash the print oil off with a solvent like acetone straight away, before the reaction can begin. Let the oil sit there long enough to make a visible print (for example, dark brown on a bright copper coin) and it's too late for acetone to do any good; you might wash off the residual oil but the metal has already reacted with it.

I have a Bermuda cent I purchased as a YN, one of my first coins. I'm sure it was uncirculated back when I first got it, but now it's more of an EF, from my handling it carelessly a few dozen times and from being stored in a PVC coin page a bit too long.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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