Across the Spectrum Collection 的展示图片库

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1885-O $1 MS64+ PCGS #7162

~TEXTILE~ "Electric Rain" Ex. Aurora Borealis (The linear dot patterns seen on this coin were caused by it resting directly against the canvas material of a U.S. Treasury bank bag. Over time, that canvas pattern was imprinted into the toning of the coin, forming an intense textile pattern).

1887 $1 MS65+ PCGS #7172

~VARIEGATED~ "Textile Plum" Ex. Aurora Borealis, Lloyd Cowle, Mike DeFalco, Battle Creek Collection (Variegated toners tend not to have any specific pattern but instead feature wild swirls of color melding together, often due to how the coin came in contact with the canvas bank bag. This example also features big green textile dots on the face and is one of the amazing coins that came out of the Battle Creek Collection, a group of 10 bags which surfaced in 2005).

1881-S $1 MS66 PCGS #7130

~POLYCHROMATIC~ "Neon Disco" (While the majority of toned Morgans and toned coins in general are polychromatic in that they feature multiple colors, most fit into some other category such as crescent or textile. However, there are also some coins which don't have any apparent pattern yet feature of blend of many different wedges of color, such as this example).

1887 $1 MS66 PCGS #7172

~CYAN~ "Hopi Jewel" Ex. Aurora Borealis, Northern Lights Collection, Lloyd Cowle, Battle Creek Collection (One of the rarest monochromatic colors to find on a Morgan, the cyan band sits just between blue and green on the color spectrum and required extremely precise conditions to develop. I am aware of just 5 such examples).