Life before today's basics...
cypher
Posts: 173
Ok. This post isn't raggin' on any ages or picking any jokes, it's basically a post which really got me thinking last night. To all those collecters/dealers who have been in the business for quite some time, what was it like collecting years ago. When I say years ago, I'm talking before the internet came along, before ebay, before certain grading companies. Did you have to hope that something you needed would pop up in your favorite coin shop nearby? Did you have to go way out of your way to drive to a coin shop to look for things you needed? How difficult was it trying to put together collections when the tools we use today were not available years and years ago. Today, you can jump on the boards here, chat about any question you might have, search a few auction sites, look up pretty up to date prices, compair pictures of your collection, and what have you. So when I think about it, the things I couldn't live without today (everything mentioned), wasn't available back then. How did you all do it?! And what was it like?? And when I say years ago, I mean...10 years? 20 years? 30 years? 40 years?
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Obscurum per obscurius
In fact both Macy's and Gimbel's (large department stores for those that may not be familiar with " Miracle on 34th Street") had coin dealers in their stores. The dealer in Macy's was very helpful and most of my better dates I purchased from him. Mail order at that time based upon my limited experience was a big turn-off, mostly overgraded coins.
Of course at the time you could still pull out of circulation most Lincolns, Buffaloes (Indian Head Nickels for the purists), Mercuries (Winged Liberty Dimes for the purists), Washingtons and some Walking Liberty halves. Times were different.
But now is good too, just different.
Joe.
Every time you got a roll of something at the bank it was exciting.
You got all the silver dollars you wanted at the bank. I could
take a bus and go downtown to the treasury building in DC and
get silver dollars. My neighbor went down there and wrote out a
check and got a great big silver bar about the size of a small
loaf of bread and brought it home on the bus. He used it as a
door stopper for years. That's no joke. Like he said a burgler
wouldn't know what it was.
We could pretty much complete our collections from circulation
except for the rare stuff. Back then there were no slabs to
help you, coins were raw and so you were forced to learn how to
grade. There were no certification services to do the work for you.
We had small coin shops set up in department stores too.
See the fun you newbies missed?
But today you are much better off because the internet, certification
services, publications, better books, more coins shows, etc. has
brought coin collecting to your fingertips. In that respect you
are fortunate. But diversify, that means some classics to go along
with your moderns.
My website
David
Joe.
Tom
Clankeye
In 1966 I bought a 55 proof Franklin half from Macy's and picked it out of the first eletric carousel I had ever seen. They were upstairs on the 4th or 5th floor as I recall. Still have the half and the memory of the trip. Thanks for reminding me. LOL, I was buying some moderns back then too!
and it sets us apart from practitioners and consultants. Gregor
I have a coin you might be interested in... the luster percolates under breath-taking toning, which cascades down the obverse in heart-stopping waterfalls of purple, green, orange and mauve. Grown men have wept, as the incredible strike transported them to worlds of battle and glory, where adoring women cried out for them and children hushed as they passed. The reverse is so clean that Martha Stewart once dined off it, and the shimmering sparks of dew-drop luster shine like stars in a night electric.*
*Perhaps it may have been dipped at one point. And there is a rim gouge. Note also, this is a dutch auction.
Clankeye The Honest Numismatist
Joe.
Obscurum per obscurius
Obscurum per obscurius
Carl
Bulldog
No good deed will go unpunished.
Free Money Search
Clankeye, dealers still use poetic language, they just make it completely nonsensical these days.
"1876-CC dime. Brilliant, charcoal-like effervescense festoons Quixotic surfaces. Original clairvoyance celebrates diverse supercilious luster on phlegmatic devices. $179"
Obscurum per obscurius
(Actually, it wasn't all bad, but I certainly don't miss buying sight-unseen raw coins through the mail...)
lots more of the old coins in nice collectable grades. To keep up there was Numis-
matic news and then Coin World came around in 1960. It really wasn't all that
much different.
Most of the really good coins were gone from circulation by the later mid-50's when
I started collecting. There were lots of collectors back then especially among the
young. Most mid size and larger schools had coin clubs and it was always easy to
find someone to trade coins with.