Could you collect again as you did when you were a kid?
Back in the early 60's collecting was fun. A few coins could still be found in circulation and I wasn't as picky on grades. (If you could somehow rationalize that the date on the buffalo nickel or Liberty Standing quarter was readable you could still put it in the folder.)
Those were the days when you could spot a Mercury dime in an Empire Coin Company ad for $2.95, wait and place an order for another Mercury that cost $2.45 (hoping it would be sold out) and list the $2.95 coin as an alternate, hoping they would send the alternate and not bill you for the difference. (It actually worked a few times, but eventually they caught on.)
I wonder if I could regain my original enthusiasm for coin collecting by going back to the way I originally collected? Could you?
Those were the days when you could spot a Mercury dime in an Empire Coin Company ad for $2.95, wait and place an order for another Mercury that cost $2.45 (hoping it would be sold out) and list the $2.95 coin as an alternate, hoping they would send the alternate and not bill you for the difference. (It actually worked a few times, but eventually they caught on.)
I wonder if I could regain my original enthusiasm for coin collecting by going back to the way I originally collected? Could you?
All glory is fleeting.
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Each time I attend a coin show or buy a roll of coins, that same spark gets ignited as I search through dealers inventory or pop open those rolls!
The name is LEE!
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
A person could do a state quarter set from circulation, but it isn't close to the old time thrill of finding a cent that is worth 25 cents in the catalog. In the old days, those thrills might happen all the time.
A person buying coins from magazine ads would likely not be a happy person if they have any numismatic knowledge. A good many magazine advertised coins are overpriced or overgraded or both. Why bother when the Internet, and images and auctions are all around?
I enjoy the hobby, by limiting purchases to hobby-type money. By buying what I like, and not worrying if someone else might like them or tell me I am idiot for buying that. I'll never be a top grader, because of eyesight and personality, but I have gotten better at it. I have a good mind for learning the prices of things, and that includes the coins I am interested in.
So, as long as that box is always present, so will be that little excited kid in me.
Ryan
<< <i>Back in the early 60's collecting was fun. A few coins could still be found in circulation and I wasn't as picky on grades. (If you could somehow rationalize that the date on the buffalo nickel or Liberty Standing quarter was readable you could still put it in the folder.)
Those were the days when you could spot a Mercury dime in an Empire Coin Company ad for $2.95, wait and place an order for another Mercury that cost $2.45 (hoping it would be sold out) and list the $2.95 coin as an alternate, hoping they would send the alternate and not bill you for the difference. (It actually worked a few times, but eventually they caught on.)
I wonder if I could regain my original enthusiasm for coin collecting by going back to the way I originally collected? Could you? >>
No you can't.
Your premises are wrong for this to work for you. If you believe a "few coins"
could be found in circulation in the old days but now it's all just modern crap
then you aren't going to enjoy the old type of collecting.
Frankly I think you're premises are wrong. I don't believe there was anything
worth collecting back in the late '50's because all the good coins had been re-
moved long before but today the coins aren't picked over much at all. That's a
huge difference.
All the coins I got back in those days are still common. Sure many have premiums
like the F buffalo nickels but they're still common.
i hooked a 12 year old by teaching her to spot varieties as a matter of fact....lincolns
easy hook too as i told her find one of these...we go to disneyland
find one of these...we go to disneyworld
find one of these we go to eurodisney
find one of these it's all 3
As a kid, in 1974, I had no income and no resources. The best I could do is push wheaties from pocket change into a Whitman. And I would read books. And I would wish that I had even one piece of gold. My grandfather had three quarter eagle indians which I saw occasionally. They were fantastic items to me.
Now, I have income. And I have the gold I always wanted.
The enthusiasm I had for pushing wheaties into a Whitman was born of necessity. I would not have that enthusiasm now.
That enthusiasm is now reserved for pushing golden dollars into a Dansco. Boy is that fun! Wowee!
In all seriousness, that enthusiasm was also partially out of ignorance of what US coins were; knowledge will take the 'edge' off of that enthusiasm. Today, I can generate that sort of enthusiasm for World Coins. It's a big world of wonderful stuff! Wide eyes and ahead we go!
The enthusiasm doesn't go away, but the competition sure gets stiff as I get older.
``https://ebay.us/m/KxolR5
<< <i><<<No, not really. A casually collector can't complete sets from pocket change. These days only a variety specialists can find anything valuable in change. Ever try to teach a 10 year-old how to spot varieties? Most would be bored to death, and would rather paint a fence than do that.>>>
i hooked a 12 year old by teaching her to spot varieties as a matter of fact....lincolns
easy hook too as i told her find one of these...we go to disneyland
find one of these...we go to disneyworld
find one of these we go to eurodisney
find one of these it's all 3 >>
Excuse me, there are no collectible coins to be found in change anymore.
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
But with the same feeling? Definitely.
Coin's for sale/trade.
Tom Pilitowski
US Rare Coin Investments
800-624-1870
Not bad...
"Bongo hurtles along the rain soaked highway of life on underinflated bald retread tires."
~Wayne
Probably a big part of the draw VAMs (and varieties in general) has for me is this detective work ambition fostered in my collecting youth. I did enjoy collecting prooflikes. But it was stale in a way. Just buying my way toward completion. Not the same as analyzing, learning, and finding new things. It's nice too because you can even enjoy problem coins when you look for interesting varieties.
So I suppose I am collecting somewhat as I did as a kid today.
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When you were 8, 10,12 years old, did you really know the value of money? A kid has not yet had the life experence to learn it.
As a ten year old were you thinking about how much your collection was going to be worth, or think when I sell this, it will help put me through college, or make a down payment on the first home, or were you really just thinking about how you wanted to find another coin to fill another hole.
For me the fun was in the hunt, a treasure hunt, to fill that hole. It didn't matter if I had to use acid to bring the date out of a Buffolo Nickel; I found one, and that date goes into that hole.
Anytime a kid takes the initiative to find something for themselves, instead of yelling MOM or DAD their learning independence. Even if the collection is junk, it's my collection, my work, my time. I put this together. As a kid we did it for one reason, it gave us pleasure. If it didn't, would we have done it?
I with Adamlaneus, world coins bring back that treasure hunt. It gives me pleasure looking through them, attempting to find the country of origin, and with some, the challenge of learning the date.
My grownup collection is made without the simple, basic emotions of a kid. That collection requires serious funds with all its implications, of which a kid is not even aware of.
The makeing a of collection, regardless of its content requires just one thing, pleasure.