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The joys of collecting inexpensive coins

Aren't inexpensive coins cool? You can keep them in your house with little fear of them getting stolen. Going to the safe deposit box to look at one's coins is a major PITA. Having to install a secure safe in your home can be expensive, and you're still left feeling less than secure unless you've got a really great alarm system, dogs, etc.

This is where inexpensive coins come in. It's nice to be able to have coins you can look at every day in the comfort of your own home. The expensive ones stay locked up, but the inexpensive ones are right there. Mind you, I'm not talking about "junk." They may not have any investment potential, but they're not supposed to-- they're reminders of the fact that coin collecting is a HOBBY.

I'm working on a few sets in bookshelf albums for myself and Whitman folders for my daughter. I also have some esoteric foreign stuff that would be hard to resell and easy to trace if stolen (how many Inner Mongolian 1938 5 chiao coins are out there, for example).

How many of you have secondary sets of inexpensive coins you keep with you just for the fun of it?
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Obscurum per obscurius

Comments



  • << <i>How many of you have secondary sets of inexpensive coins you keep with you just for the fun of it? >>




    Secondary set?
    Brevity is the soul of wit. --William Shakespeare
  • I just insure all my coins and don't worry about it. I also live a safe part of town. Our area had 0 breakins last year and this year so far.
  • Yes inexpensive coins are great, I've just recently started a Franklin half set in a Dansco and also in the works is a Peace dollar set also in a Dansco. I don't have to own the super duper high grade slabbed clad anything.
    Friends are Gods way of apologizing for your relatives.
  • hookooekoohookooekoo Posts: 381 ✭✭✭
    May entire collection is inexpensive coins! And I love them.

    I have so far only purchased 2 coins that cost 3 digits (1916-D Merc and a 1798 Cent), with my average coin costing me about $20.

    Inexpensive coins are what keeps this hobby open to just about anyone who is interested. Spendable income (or lack there of) doesn't have to be a reason to avoid coin collecting.
  • FrattLawFrattLaw Posts: 3,290 ✭✭
    I think album sets are great, sometimes even better then the slab registry sets. I like looking at an album with the coins, holes to be filled and all. There's something to be said to feeling the weight and texture of an album full of coins. How each coin tones over time and changes.

    Ah, coin collecting of my youth. Actually, I'm also puting together several album collections. It's great, I can sit at the bargain box and look through all the 2x2s, cherry picking what I need and plugging those holes.

    Michael

    MW Fattorosi Collection
  • BNEBNE Posts: 772
    I do! I am working on all the circ strike nickels to put in Dansco albums. But the registry thing is infectious, and when I start out doing a lower-grade set, I begin to suffer "grade creep" and end up upgrading the more modest coins. But I also collect with my kids, and my "seconds" (Mercs and Buffs) go to them.

    I think that when I get to older material (bust coinage, etc.) I will keep those sets in really low grades, and just try to fill the holes.
    "The essence of sleight of hand is distraction and misdirection. If smoeone can be convinced that he has, through his own perspicacity, divined your hidden purposes, he will not look further."

    William S. Burroughs, Cities of the Red Night
  • greghansengreghansen Posts: 4,301 ✭✭✭
    I absolutely agree. MS slabbed coins in a box or Eagle album are nice and certainly give you satisfaction on one level. For pure collecting joy, however, nothing substitutes for the ability to feel and touch your collectible. I love the fact that I can take out a raw F/VF Bust Half or similar coin from the album and feel it in my hands, without worrying about whether I'll get fingerprints on it or worrying about whether I am going to breath on it while looking at it under magnification.

    Greg Hansen, Melbourne, FL Click here for any current EBAY auctions Multiple "Circle of Trust" transactions over 14 years on forum

  • Good observation on which there is no argument here. I am trying to acquire a set of uncleaned, no problem Barber halfs in fine condition. 90% of the dates cost less than $50 but are very challenging to find in true fine condition. The most expensive in fine condition (1897-O) sells for around $300. It is easier to find AU and MS Barber halfs than it is to find fine condition ones.
  • Yeah, and some people cann't aford buying slabs every time they go out.
  • UncleJoeUncleJoe Posts: 2,536 ✭✭✭
    Inexpensive is relative.

    Clankeye, I couldn't have said it better "Secondary set?".

    Inexpensive coins are my MAIN set. Very rarely will I buy a coin over $50. In fact, at the Orlando show last month I purchased about 100 coins for a little more than $300. image

    How's that for inexpensive? image

    Joe.
  • Inexpesive...almost all of them. Junk...some of them could be called that by some. I also have actually touched most of them. image
    Time sure flies when you don't know what you are doing...

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  • shirohniichanshirohniichan Posts: 4,992 ✭✭✭
    90% of the dates cost less than $50 but are very challenging to find in true fine condition.

    Yea, verily. Grades just below big price jumps are usually sold as the next higher grade, so a fine coin will sell as a VF. image

    Raw coins are sure cool to have so you can see the edges and get an idea what metal feels like instead of plastic. In fact, cleaned album fillers are even better for taking out and examining. Since the surfaces are already altered, you don't have to worry much about adding fingerprints. image
    image
    Obscurum per obscurius
  • critocrito Posts: 1,735
    image

    think I'll put a circ bugs in the franklin album hole image
  • The Joy is in the journey! I love the hunt, and as I upgrade the series currently on my mind, I found I often ended up with duplicates, and triplicates but in ever so slightly different grades (all raw, usually bargain).

    I learned (here) to get the keys first, and that helped determine the general grade of the 'edition' of the series, based on what I was comfortable paying for them.

    So, I end up with a Dansco for the primo ones, and a secondary and often a tertiary collection for the truly low ends; the ones I put in an empty pocket and handle freely, leave around the house for further gazing and 'decorating'. Thinking of it as 'chi'.


    I've never sold a coin, just a black hole for circulated (at best AU) stuff. The multiple low and medium grade folders aren't worth much cash, but the satisfaction level remains high.

    I like to consider other needs to compare costs and value when I find one I like. Is it's worth comparable to 'lunch', 'dinner and a movie', a tank of gas for the van, or a car payment? That help me budget the cash flow of the moment.

    No Twelve Step program yet?
    Every day is a gift.
  • I mostly collect inexpensive coins. Some day when the kids are out of school (2 and 3 years) I'll be able to afford
    to start upgrading. But only the keys and semis will be in slabs. I love my albums and being able to touch my
    coins. Hmmm, bigger boat...more expensive coins...tough call. Wonder which they would rather get. image

    Scott M
    Scott M

    Everything is linear if plotted log-log with a fat magic marker
  • TrimeTrime Posts: 1,863 ✭✭✭
    Shiro,
    I like this thread since it reminds me of the excitement of finding interesting coins. This is how it began for most of us. For example , I could have a wonderful time with a large bucket of circulated 19th century coins looking for varieties. I often get the joys of discovery mixed ( confused) with the thrill of high grade expensive and beautiful specimens. Something to think about.
    Trime
  • I just received $1800 worth of coins, and the ones that thrilled me the most were a raw AU 1917 dime with nice toning and sharp full-split
    bands-and a suprisingly nicely toned '26-S ANACS VF-30 SLQ. Less than $80 for the pair! "Baseball" suggested that I buy inexpensive
    coins while I was "taking a breather." I think it's a great idea! I also added an ANACS 62 $10 '91-CC and two toned 'cc $1's. The "cheap"
    coins gave as much pleasure as the big-ticket items. I think there's a lesson here.
    Nicht mehr Münzen-für jetzt!
  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,653 ✭✭✭✭✭
    A lot of my best coins come from the bank. You never know what you'll get.
    Tempus fugit.

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