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[Poll] Why do you collect the coins you collect?

Everyone pretty much collects for different reasons and like myself, I would suspect that your collecting habits might change over the years. At this point in your collecting, what drives you to seek the coins you collect?

Comments

  • BillJonesBillJones Posts: 34,836 ✭✭✭✭✭
    History is the primary reason why I buy most of the coins I own. Once I've selected which issues I want, the beauty part kicks in.

    Rarity is down the list for me. There are some common pieces that give me more pleasure than some rare pieces. The thing about "rare" is that it quite often drives up the prices, which is not a good thing.
    Retired dealer and avid collector of U.S. type coins, 19th century presidential campaign medalets and selected medals. In recent years I have been working on a set of British coins - at least one coin from each king or queen who issued pieces that are collectible. I am also collecting at least one coin for each Roman emperor from Julius Caesar to ... ?
  • crypto79crypto79 Posts: 8,623
    I would say a little bit of every reason you listed. I am working on a complete Carson City short set for Trade dollars. The set is not easy in an original state but when you add that both Redbook varieties are off shoots of the CC mintmark and the transitional Hubs affect 1875 and 1876 years it adds up to a 10coin sub-set that provides quite a challenge. The draw of this set to me can be comprised by the tangible connection to the Wild West and the Orient. I have chosen to add two choicely chopped coins and one heavily to further mix up the set. This series is one of the last widely used silver dollars with a fascinating political and commercial history that represents a true value vs availability ratio in the high end circulated conditions. The fact that you add different hubs and chopmarks and the fact that and that the two mine errors that tie in are some of the strongest for their type in all of American coins.
  • O.C.D.
    "Everyday above ground is a good day"

  • I am hoarding not collecting; as a hedge against inflation. That is why I can say give me your p.o.s., your dreck, your culls; I will melt them all when the spot is right.image
  • MidLifeCrisisMidLifeCrisis Posts: 10,553 ✭✭✭✭✭
    History is by far the number one reason for me.
  • smokincoinsmokincoin Posts: 2,636 ✭✭✭
    Several of the supplied choices interests me. image
  • PerryHallPerryHall Posts: 46,860 ✭✭✭✭✭
    History with investment as a distant second. When I say investment, I consider quality rare coins to be an inflation hedge and a way to preserve wealth over the long haul.

    Worry is the interest you pay on a debt you may not owe.
    "Paper money eventually returns to its intrinsic value---zero."----Voltaire
    "Everything you say should be true, but not everything true should be said."----Voltaire

  • ctf_error_coinsctf_error_coins Posts: 15,433 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I collect for 5 of those reasons, but chose errors

    the 5 reasons are Rarity, Beauty, Errors, Investment, Intrugue
  • GrivGriv Posts: 2,804
    I was hoping I would be able to have multiple choices but did not see an option. Sorry.
  • anablepanablep Posts: 5,160 ✭✭✭✭✭
    History of Morgans primarily, but there are secondary reasons as well such as availability in mint state and cheap prices on common dates in MS64-65...
    Always looking for attractive rim toned Morgan and Peace dollars in PCGS or (older) ANA/ANACS holders!

    "Bongo hurtles along the rain soaked highway of life on underinflated bald retread tires."


    ~Wayne
  • yellowkidyellowkid Posts: 5,486


    << <i>O.C.D. >>

    :image
  • ram1946ram1946 Posts: 762 ✭✭
    For me, it's the great Americana portrayed in the early twentieth century coinage (Buffalos, SLQs, WLHs). These are the coins that were still readily available in circulation when I started collecting. The "modern" issues with the presidential themes really can't compare to these classic designs, espeically when they went clad.
  • Beauty and history, in whatever order I see fit at the moment.image
  • LindeDadLindeDad Posts: 18,766 ✭✭✭✭✭
    Somebody has to love all that dreck that is out there.image
  • RollermanRollerman Posts: 1,897 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I answered "no reason in particular", but would have preferred "no ONE reason in particular". I collect because of a compose of reasons such as you have listed. If I buy a particularly rare coin, I might enjoy it for that reason (rarity). If I pick up a common coin, but in superb condition, I might enjoy it primarily for that reason etc.
    I might like a coin for it's toning, or that it's unusual, or that I needed an update to one of my sets. There are many reasons and sometimes they are blurred.
    Best wishes,
    Pete
    "Ain't None of Them play like him (Bix Beiderbecke) Yet."
    Louis Armstrong
  • DennisHDennisH Posts: 14,011 ✭✭✭✭✭
    2, 5, 6, 7, 8 at least.
    When in doubt, don't.
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  • cladkingcladking Posts: 28,739 ✭✭✭✭✭
    I'm pretty close to being a "natural" coin collector; I was born this way.

    As a babe in arms I found the concept of money intriguing. And to me money was the
    nice clean coins much moreso than the tattered pieces of paper that came and went.
    The concept of coins that move randomly about while being exchanged for just what
    a person needs astounds me still. The ends of this equation have always been of ex-
    crutiating interest to me. What does a person need and what have people needed in
    the past? How do the movements of these coins affect or reflect such needs? How do
    people learn to value the ends of this equation? How do changes affect them and how
    do these effect changes?

    Back in 1957 it finally occurred to me that it was possible to actually collect coins. I had
    used them limitedly but the concept of studying specific examples and then saving them
    just hadn't crossed my mind. The idea that saving an example of the various types and
    dates came pretty suddenly when my father offerred to let me have the coins from his
    change jar that were new to me. I started a buffalo nickel collection immediately.

    I have a deep fascination for all coins in all conditions and the strory they individually tell
    but my favorite insights have always come from actively circulating coinage so you can
    imagine my chagrin when it was announced that the dates would be frozen and the
    coinage debased. It was about the end of the world as I knew it but fortunately the
    blow was softened by the fact that it happened in slow motion. The buffalos with full
    dates were pretty much gone by 1964 anyway and these was no real change to the
    cents and nickels except the loss of mint marks. This was no change at all to the Philly
    issues.

    Unsurprisingly coins took a back seat to other more pressing interests when in puberty
    but I did still pay a lot of attention to circulating coinage. It was still pretty boring in
    the early '70's because almost all the coins were Unc or AU and it seemed most were
    dated 1965 anyway. But by 1972 I was back looking at coins again and knew that no-
    body was saving the clads. It was obvious they were being nearly completely overlooked.
    RS Yeoman made statements to the effect that this was at the detriment of collectors
    and there were a handfull of collectors of whom I was unaware in those days. There
    were people like Pittman and Herb Hicks as well as a few others.

    But I saw no good point in actually collecting them because you could always find an
    example of everything in pocket change with little effort. The FED in those days "lost"
    coins in storage and brand new coins all the way back to 1965 would get released. I
    hadn't paid enough attention to the coins to notice that the reverses varied on them
    and didn't spot this until the late-'70's. There was a story in the Chicago Tribune in
    1972 that the mint was going to start rotating their coin stocks and I was suddenly in-
    terested in putting together not only a set but extras as an investment. It was obvious
    that if the coins diodn't sit in storage then all the coins would become worn.

    Initially my interest was primarily as a sort of get rich quick scheme. Yeah, that worked
    real good. But as the years went by the stories told by the coins got more interesting
    and more detailed. The coins became more diverse. They became addictive.

    In the late'70's I figured if US moderns were tough then perhaps the moderns of oth-
    er countries were tough as well so I started investigating them and found they could
    even be far tougher in some cases.

    Tokens and medals were last. The tokens are another form of money used in a limited
    time and space and from a larger perspective medals are the same. Coins had become
    rather a known entity to me and I knew I could never learn everything about tokens and
    medals so started collections of them as well. This is one area that I've given in to prac-
    ticalities and have limited my intetrests to specialties rather than trying to collect every-
    thing.

    So that's it. I collect primarily modern US and world coins as well as tokens and medals.








    tempus fugit extra philosophiam.
  • AnkurJAnkurJ Posts: 11,370 ✭✭✭✭
    History.
    All coins kept in bank vaults.
    PCGS Registries
    Box of 20
    SeaEagleCoins: 11/14/54-4/5/12. Miss you Larry!
  • droopyddroopyd Posts: 5,381 ✭✭✭


    << <i>I would say a little bit of every reason you listed. >>



    image
    Me at the Springfield coin show:
    image
    60 years into this hobby and I'm still working on my Lincoln set!
  • fcloudfcloud Posts: 12,133 ✭✭✭✭
    I think it is a mixture of many of the options listed but went with beauty.

    Hard not to say beauty...

    image

    President, Racine Numismatic Society 2013-2014; Variety Resource Dimes; See 6/8/12 CDN for my article on Winged Liberty Dimes; Ebay

  • BoomBoom Posts: 10,165
    O.C.D. here as well.

    History nut too. image

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