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What Was The Last Coin Show That You Attended ...

What was the last coin show that you attended that meet your expectations, or if you had no expectations, what was the last coin show that you attended that you considered a great show?

Please explain why.
Greg Allen Coins, LLC Show Schedule: https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/573044/our-show-schedule-updated-10-2-16 Authorized dealer for NGC, PCGS, CAC, and QA. Member of PNG, RTT (Founding Platinum Member), FUN, MSNS, and NCBA (formerly ICTA); Life Member of ANA and CSNS. NCBA Board member. "GA3" on CCE.

Comments

  • Long Beach!!

    Cause it is the only show I've been to.
  • GooberGoober Posts: 980 ✭✭✭
    Never haveimage

    but I wish I could
    Prost!

    Why step over the dollar to get to the cent? Because it's a 55DDO.
  • foodudefoodude Posts: 3,568 ✭✭✭
    Long Beach!!

    Cause it is the only show I've been to. /


    Great, womeone that read the whole question, and gave a complete answer.

    BTW, you started with what is generlly a very good or better show. Now you may have expectations that are too high for most other shows (not all, but most).
    Greg Allen Coins, LLC Show Schedule: https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/573044/our-show-schedule-updated-10-2-16 Authorized dealer for NGC, PCGS, CAC, and QA. Member of PNG, RTT (Founding Platinum Member), FUN, MSNS, and NCBA (formerly ICTA); Life Member of ANA and CSNS. NCBA Board member. "GA3" on CCE.
  • BearBear Posts: 18,953 ✭✭✭
    While this may not have been the greates show that ever was, I had

    no trouble finding some superb coins to buy and I had no troublr selling

    coins. Of course it helps to have a good ongoing relationship with a number

    of dealers. It takes time to develope these contacts, but it is well worth the time

    and effort. Seeing friendly and familiar faces at a show makes it all the more enjoyable.

    While I always enjoy going to a big show like L.B., it is important for people who have never

    been thru a major downturn in the coin market to always be wary about tying up what could

    be a sizable amount of cash in coins that in down times may be difficult to sell at almost any price.

    It is often during the good times, that folks make the errors in purchases that will haunt them in

    the down times.

    There once was a place called
    Camelotimage
  • tsacchtsacch Posts: 2,929 ✭✭✭
    1989 pittsburgh
    Family, kids, coins, sports (playing not watching), jet skiing, wakeboarding, Big Air....no one ever got hurt in the air....its the sudden stop that hurts. I hate Hurricane Sandy. I hate FEMA and i hate the blasted insurance companies.
  • Long beach. About 5 hours ago. Good showimage Not the best but a good one.

    Cameron Kiefer
  • foodudefoodude Posts: 3,568 ✭✭✭
    1989 pittsburgh

    I attend that ANA show, and yes it was a good one.
    Greg Allen Coins, LLC Show Schedule: https://forums.collectors.com/discussion/573044/our-show-schedule-updated-10-2-16 Authorized dealer for NGC, PCGS, CAC, and QA. Member of PNG, RTT (Founding Platinum Member), FUN, MSNS, and NCBA (formerly ICTA); Life Member of ANA and CSNS. NCBA Board member. "GA3" on CCE.
  • StuartStuart Posts: 9,761 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Bellaire Coin Club Show in Houston a couple of months ago.

    Stuart

    Collect 18th & 19th Century US Type Coins, Silver Dollars, $20 Gold Double Eagles and World Crowns & Talers with High Eye Appeal

    "Luck is what happens when Preparation meets Opportunity"
  • TootawlTootawl Posts: 5,877 ✭✭✭
    Best so far: Pittsburgh ANA last month. It was great! The people made the difference.
    The show that was a disappointment was the FUN show. The show itself was exactly like Baltimore and too many things went bad for me that weekend. One of my worst birthdays ever.
    PCGS Currency: HOF 2013, Best Low Ball Set 2009-2014, 2016, 2018. Appreciation Award 2015, Best Showcase 2018, Numerous others.
  • The Baltimore ANA show last summer. It was the first show that I ever went to and the only one so far. I was able to get a few coins to fill some holes in my Early proof Jefferson collection. I was also able to spend a few days in D.C. so it was a great trip.image
  • Baltimore show last July... image Was lots of fun (Except for the whole Mass Transit Experience... image But it was a great experience for me, not really about coins, but meeting many people that I had only talked to online before... most notably... IdahoGal, KSteelheader, TooTawl, Dollars, Tonelover, Wayne Herndon, Bryan of TBT, kinda met CarolJ and I think a couple others... image That was a lot of fun... one of the best shows I've been to though was a week before Baltimore, the July 4th Clearwater Coin Club Show. It's a great 200 table show, the largest regional show in my area. Only bigger show is FUN... image
    -George
    42/92
  • jdimmickjdimmick Posts: 9,674 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I really enjoyed the Pittsburg ANA this year. It was fun and very educational from a different perspective.

    jim
  • GonfunkoGonfunko Posts: 1,481 ✭✭✭
    F.U.N. 2004 - It met and exceeded my expectations.
  • jharjhar Posts: 1,126
    2003 Ft Walton Beach Coin Show. It met my expectations...
























    ...They had coins for sale there!! imageimageimageimageimage
    J'har
  • RYKRYK Posts: 35,797 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The Pittsburgh ANA 2004 (as you know, we sat together at the PCGS lunch image).

    It was the most interesting show I ever attended. In one day, I was able to buy coins, sell coins, attend lectures, view auction lots, look at a lot of coins on the bourse floor, attend an auction, have coins reviewed informally at PCGS and NGC, make a submission at NGC, view a wide range of interesting exhibits, see some unique and extremely rare coins, attend the PCGS luncheon, and shoot-the-bull with old friends and new friends. I cannot imagine that one could be any more pleasantly immersed in coins in a single day.
  • Santa Clara last spring. Only show I've been to in fact. It was about what I expected in terms of the coins there. What I wasn't ready for was trying to bargain with dealers, which I think I should have and could have done a lot better. And also, I was surprised that no one at all would even consider looking at some raw coins I had brought to sell or drop off with pcgs. Some even bashed them, even said they were cleaned or whizzed or had this or that problem. This was totally lies of course because I did get them graded by pcgs. I sold some on ebay for double what I offered them to for dealers raw! The same exact coin! I can't believe the dealers didn't know better than to snap them up for what I offered.
  • NumisOxideNumisOxide Posts: 10,997 ✭✭✭✭✭
    The first and only coin show I have been to was the coin show in New York city in July. I think it was called the invitational coin show or something like that. David Lawrence rare coins sent me the info. My dad took me. I found it very interesting. I felt like I was in coin heaven because all the great coins I saw. I ended up staying two hours and looking for a coin to buy. Then I was into buffalo nickels in Mint state. Now I'm into seated Liberty half dollars. I ended up buying a nice golden tone PCGS MS64 1935-D buffalo nickel in a old green holder type.
  • Blue Ridge about 5 or 6 years ago.
    Today's mighty oak is just yesterday's nut that held its ground.
  • Grapevine, Texas Coin Show.
    I fel it's a really good show. They have something like 50-60 tables or more crammed into the Grapevine Convention Center.
    Especially if you go on Saturday at about 11:00AM to 1:00PM.
    image
  • BarryBarry Posts: 10,100 ✭✭✭
    NYC Invitational - a few months ago - very disappointing - relatively small, and half the delaers were gone by Sat. morning.

    Last great show - Baltimore, a few weeks before NYC.
  • Ohio State show in Columbus Ohio last weekend. I don't usually have high expectations for a show, I'm lucky if I find one slab variety I need and I don't think I've found a coin in almost a year. but at Columbus I found one new SEGS variety I hadn't seen before, a new minor PCGS variety, and a new old company! I had heard some stories long ago about this one but I had never seen one and didn't think they had ever really gotten started.

    NLG (Numismatic Laser Graphics) Ownd by Pelco Coin Galleries this service is a variation of the photocertificate service. The coin is in an air-tite holder, card, and oversized vinyl flip stapled to the "certificate". The certificate is a greenish cardbaord holder that instead of photographs, has a white light hologram of each side of the coin contained therein. The label with the seial number, description, registration,date of certification, grade, and owners value is at the bottom. The back has the company name but it is usually covered by the label folded over from the front side.

    The interesting thing about this company is the use of the holograms. the coins can be magnified and still retain their three dimentional appearance, and as they are tiped the images still display rotating cartwheel luster just as the coins do. Not flat an fixed like a regular photo does. tipping the hologram allows "light" to play across and highlight different areas just like when you examine a real coin. The one thing it can't do though is reproduce th true color. Being a white light hologram the image is seen in red and green.

    image

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