Jordan0693 Posted December 20, 2014 Posted December 20, 2014 How red do coins have to be to be classed as being red Quote
Paulus Posted December 20, 2014 Posted December 20, 2014 How red do coins have to be to be classed as being redOh joy, this topic again ... Chris (Peckris) is the authority on TPGs' assessments of coin colours I think Quote
NRP Posted December 20, 2014 Posted December 20, 2014 At least 75% full lustre on both sides?? Maybe more? Quote
azda Posted December 20, 2014 Posted December 20, 2014 It could be blue because we really don't careMuch here what an american TPG says about a coin on a slab Quote
Peckris Posted December 20, 2014 Posted December 20, 2014 How red do coins have to be to be classed as being redOh joy, this topic again ... Chris (Peckris) is the authority on TPGs' assessments of coin colours I think Thank you Paulus No coin has to be red. Red lustre is very very rare. Lustre is usually in the spectrum from yellow to orange, sometimes 'golden'. (Unstated subtext: why do Americans mangle the English so? Why can't they just use terms we all understand instead of redefining common words to mean something they just don't.. Oops, did I say that out loud? )To answer the question you thought you asked... coins with lustre are usually described according to % of lustre remaining (at least, on this side of the pond they are). BU means all lustre is there, ABU means (depending on dealer) somewhere from 75% - 95% lustre, lesser shades can be described with a % e.g. UNC 30/70 which is understood as 30% lustre on the obverse and 70% on the reverse, and so on. So if by 'red' you mean BU then virtually all lustre should be present. A further complication is where lustre is present (even full lustre) but it has faded from brilliance to a subtler shade. Colin Cooke Coins for example use the term "lightly toning" to describe this state, which only rarely would command a premium, most often it would be a reduced value. Quote
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