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Phases of collecting.

keetskeets Posts: 25,351 ✭✭✭✭✭
edited June 12, 2020 7:47AM in U.S. Coin Forum

Like many collectors, I have been through several phases and changed directions more times than hindsight tells me is advisable. Still, I think they have all benefited me and helped with the next phase. I remember once scrubbing a few Cents with a Brillo pad so they looked as shiny as the others in the folder --- don't do that!!! I got focused on brilliant white Mint State coins(apologies to my friend, RickO) and learned that time changes things and they are often left as they are, even if they aren't as bright as I'd like. I discovered that there is more to collect than just coins, that some pretty cool things have been made over the years that weren't money yet are still in the realm of Numismatics. There are more, but I think you should catch my drift by now.

So the Genesis of this all is, wonderfully, The Beatles. I was thinking of where I am in the Hobby and the opening narrative by John Lennon for "Two Of Us" popped into my mind.................." 'I Dig a Pygmy', by Charles Hawtrey and the Deaf Aids... Phase One, in which Doris gets her oats!" I know I'm past phase one and I know I'm not in the last phase(at least I hope not). I think that I'm in the midst of a phase where I finally know what I want my Heirs to have to contend with or what I want to have accumulated when I decide to stop collecting. In a way it's sort of comforting.

Can you identify a phase you're in or describe a few you've been through?? I think the perspective of older collectors might help newer, younger collectors. At least it should. ;)

Al H.


Comments

  • chesterbchesterb Posts: 966 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Good post. I need to think about it but I'm looking forward to the responses!

  • Tom147Tom147 Posts: 1,485 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I'm at the phase where I'm thinking what happens to my collection when I'm gone. Tidying up some loose ends, looking for nice coins to complete a few sets that just need one hear or there. Need to get it on paper ( as my youngest has told me several times ) As my sons have no interest in collecting, I'm unsure what will happen. Been thinking that I'd like to see at least part of my collection stay together. Top Ten Registry sets in particular. I do have some of my raw coins in Dansco albums ( 3 ) one for each of my sons.

  • TurtleCatTurtleCat Posts: 4,628 ✭✭✭✭✭

    My phases since the beginning

    1. Collect anything and everything but have no money
    2. Get rolls from banks and look for cool stuff
    3. Buy lower and nicer stuff
    4. Sell off bunches of stuff and regret it a decade later
    5. Buy much nicer and more expensive stuff for registry
    6. Buy more gold for registry
    7. Stop buying stuff for a while and fill some folders with lower end stuff I already have or can acquire
    8. Where next? Maybe some more foreign, some more roll searching, some more albums. Maybe sell some things.
  • marcmoishmarcmoish Posts: 6,752 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Sonorandesertrat said:

    My experiences, buying and selling, have left me with a strong sense of wariness. as far as the business end of the hobby is concerned. Many collectors, and I was present on a number of unfortunate occasions or learned of things after the fact, get burned when buying or selling, and this sometimes sours them on the hobby or even is financially ruinous. I also made some stupid mistakes when selling coins in the past. Collectors who never sell coins are apt to learn tough lessons about what they bought, whom they bought pieces from, and/or falling for marketing ploys that frequently target investors.

    This paragraph is so well written, I can totally relate.

    Great thread!

  • JimnightJimnight Posts: 10,846 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Believe it or not ... I never went through phases in my collecting.

  • ctf_error_coinsctf_error_coins Posts: 15,433 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 12, 2020 9:55AM

    @Jimnight said:
    Believe it or not ... I never went through phases in my collecting.

    I only got two phases left :o

    Ok maybe 3 or 4 ;)

    Perhaps 5 <3

  • abcde12345abcde12345 Posts: 3,404 ✭✭✭✭✭

    The more I know the more I realize I don't know.

  • coinbufcoinbuf Posts: 11,900 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 12, 2020 10:11AM

    Life in general takes all though many unexpected twists and changes, hobbies are just the same. After going though the early years of collecting lots of stuff (still have too much of the stuff), a brief but enjoyable Morgan phase, old slab phase (still look for those but rarely find one I don't have to buy now), and Lincoln set. I am sitting at a crossroads. I have a few year sets that I'm dabbling with like my 1940 set for my mothers birth year but no real direction at this time. I know I don't want to do another long series and Lincoln memorial cents don't do it for me. Thinking that I should get serious and sell off the Morgans and stuff and buy more gold coins but haven't been motivated to do that with gold prices so high. So I'm just waiting for something to strike me as interesting as I sit in limbo.

    Throughout it all I have learned a lot including these points:
    1) Never get caught in the plastic trap, which means never be focused on one brand
    2) Never worry about the registry, I'll never have the funds to compete
    3) Never buy a coin with spots and/or fingerprints, those eyesores will really eat at you
    4) Be fussy, buy what you want the first time don't play the buy and upgrade game, that's a game the dealers win collectors lose.

    My Lincoln Registry
    My Collection of Old Holders

    Never a slave to one plastic brand will I ever be.
  • ashelandasheland Posts: 23,866 ✭✭✭✭✭

    In the last few years I’ve gotten a lot more patient in my collecting and have grown to greatly appreciate original surfaces.

  • CoinHoarderCoinHoarder Posts: 2,644 ✭✭✭✭✭
    edited June 13, 2020 5:10AM

    .

  • WCCWCC Posts: 2,915 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I primarily collect four denominations from two mints of one design (not US). That's all I have the money for if I'm ever going to make any real progress with it.

    There are other coins I like but less or a lot less, such as when I was starting out as a YN in the mid to late 70's. Aside from financial limitations, I don't buy it because it's available (almost) any time over 95% of the time if I want it, even when it is (somewhat) scarce.

    If I ever do change focus, it will likely be to something more "advanced"; Spanish cobs, Crusader coinage or something in ancients like Byzantine silver and bronze.

  • rickoricko Posts: 98,724 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Collect from change only.
    Collect some series (requires some purchases)
    Collect challenge coins and poker chips
    Stack gold and silver
    Collect only that which has strong appeal to me - this is where I am now.
    Cheers, RickO

  • gripgrip Posts: 9,962 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @marcmoish said:

    @Sonorandesertrat said:

    My experiences, buying and selling, have left me with a strong sense of wariness. as far as the business end of the hobby is concerned. Many collectors, and I was present on a number of unfortunate occasions or learned of things after the fact, get burned when buying or selling, and this sometimes sours them on the hobby or even is financially ruinous. I also made some stupid mistakes when selling coins in the past. Collectors who never sell coins are apt to learn tough lessons about what they bought, whom they bought pieces from, and/or falling for marketing ploys that frequently target investors.

    This paragraph is so well written, I can totally relate.

    Great thread!

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  • SonorandesertratSonorandesertrat Posts: 5,695 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Selective? Do you mean selectively dumb, selectively expensive dumb? Selectively wised up? :p

    Member: EAC, NBS, C4, CWTS, ANA

    RMR: 'Wer, wenn ich schriee, hörte mich denn aus der Engel Ordnungen?'

    CJ: 'No one!' [Ain't no angels in the coin biz]
  • CoinJunkieCoinJunkie Posts: 8,772 ✭✭✭✭✭

    1) Even though my family had no money when I was young (1960s), my dad had a fairly sizeable collection of circulated coins in Whitman folders (probably from teenage years).
    2) This, along with a great uncle who bought mint/proof sets, sparked my interest in coins and looking through my change.
    3) My dad's collection got stolen by Allied Van Lines in a cross-country move in the early 1970s.
    4) I got a paper route in high school (mid-1970s) and decided to put some of the proceeds into assembling Whitman albums of Morgan and Peace dollars. Had most of the common dates, no toughies.
    5) Shortly after graduating high school, I sold all the silver dollars for a few hundred bucks and blew through it pretty quickly.
    6) Fast forward to 1998: I start to realize that all of the 20th century coinage would soon gain cachet by being from the previous century.
    7) With my newfangled broadband connection, I start surfing the web looking for places to buy (generic) slabbed coins.
    8) I soon realize that some coins are dogs and that photos (and return policies!) are essential.
    9) I discover eBay and start enjoying auction fever.
    10) Though initially going after blast white coins, I soon branch out into toners thanks to Greattoning's (and others') auctions.
    11) I started going to the Long Beach coin show (very early 2000s) fairly regularly which was a feeding frenzy in those days and totally opened up my eyes to the beauty of classic coinage.
    12) My preference for color and eye appeal grows stronger.
    13) I notice that many of my favorite toners are silver Roosie dimes and decide to pursue assembling a complete PCGS set.
    14) Somewhere along the line I realize that not all toning (even wild color) is attractive to my eye. I also realize that toning which is appropriate on some series doesn't appeal on others. I sell a bunch of stuff.
    15) CAC comes along and I react by moving away from US type and focusing on the Roosie set and darkside.
    16) A few years ago I get into large type US paper money.
    17) I finish (late 2019) my complete Roosie silver set (PCGS 67 or better) and decide to post it on the Registry.
    18) I get reinstated to the CU Forum after a 4-year ban to facilitate commerce and communication.
    19) I go to FUN for the first time ever and meet the Roosie brotherhood.
    20) I make peace with CAC and start actively looking at acquiring US type again. I also pursue upgrades for the Registry set.
    21) I spend too much time on the CU forum........................ B)

  • mcarney1173mcarney1173 Posts: 927 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I am 26 but have had the privilege of being in the hobby for about 15 years. Started by filling Whitman folders with Lincoln cents in my early teens. Moved on to mid-grade raw type (7070 collecting) in my later teens but overextended myself a bit with high-end certified stuff and sold everything right before college. Now I am back to high grade type (within my means) and a focus on silver dollars and halves.

  • GazesGazes Posts: 2,315 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @MidLifeCrisis said:
    Phase One - Childhood
    I collected coins as a kid, from about 8 to 16 years old. I built a collection of random coins that interested me. I dreamed about key dates. I remember ordering coins from dealers I read about in coin magazines, calling their 800 numbers, and waiting impatiently for the coin to arrive in my mail box. One time I remember ordering a mint state Mercury Dime from New England Rare Coin Galleries. I remember thinking it was the greatest thing when I got it in the mail. I also searched flea markets and made friends with a local dealer. In my teen years, my dad and I bought proof sets directly from the US mint.
    Fun times.

    Phase Two - I'm an adult now with a little extra money
    I never lost interest in coins, but life, marriage, family, the military, etc. took me away from the hobby from about 1983 to about 2004. Then I bought a run of proof sets on eBay on a whim and was hooked again. But I was living in Italy at the time and didn't put much more effort into it than buying on eBay occasionally.

    Phase Three - The Colonial Bug bit me hard
    On 17 August 2006, I sent an email to a dealer I'd never heard of named Coin Rarities Online. I was retired from the Army and living in Maryland and surfing the internet when I ran across a coin on their site, a 1740 Mo MF Mexico Pillar Dollar MS62 [PCGS] ex Pittman. I soon got a response, bought the coin and started discussing coins and collecting with some guy named John. It didn't take long before that discussion turned to colonial coins. Meanwhile, I became fascinated with high grade 1773 Virginia Halfpennies and with the idea that I could own a mint condition coin from the 18th Century. The more I learned about colonial coins, the more I wanted to know. I was hooked. I still am.

    I will pause here to say that finding a single area of interest and focusing on that area almost exclusively has served me well over the years and I highly recommend it to other collectors.

    Phase Four - In and out of the hobby
    I've built two primary collections since 2006: a collection of colonial coins with a traceable provenance and a collection of world coins that circulated in early America. I really enjoyed both but I spent a lot of money on both. Other things came up that I needed to spend money on so...I sold the first collection and left the hobby for a while. I returned, built the second collection, sold it, and left the hobby again for a while.

    Phase Five - I'm back.
    I've returned to the hobby again and I'm slowly building another collection. I've been having a lot of fun so far!

    What kind of collection are you working on now?

  • MidLifeCrisisMidLifeCrisis Posts: 10,568 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Gazes said:
    What kind of collection are you working on now?

    It will be a combination of the two I previously built - colonial coins with a traceable provenance and world coins that circulated in early America. I had a lot of fun building those collections and I still remember quite a bit. :smile:

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  • MidLifeCrisisMidLifeCrisis Posts: 10,568 ✭✭✭✭✭

    @Sonorandesertrat said:
    I have been through multiple phases of collecting.

    When it's time to check out, I will have coins with me. Two of them.

    Great post! I found myself nodding in agreement and appreciation several times as I read it.

  • oldabeintxoldabeintx Posts: 2,510 ✭✭✭✭✭
    1. Coins in circulation.
    2. Buy coins using paper route and odd job money
    3. Girls, cars, college
    4. Marriage, kids
    5. Good Job, started buying coins I dreamed about as a child
    6. Lost Good Job, sold everything
    7. Another Good Job, started collecting Lincolniana, mainly Lincoln medals
    8. Started a Company, sold the Lincolniana, started buying coins I dreamed about as a young man, focused on series
    9. Today, sold most series, focusing on type, started collecting European medals
    10. Future, sell the company, upgrade and finish the type set, stay with the medals (will never complete)
  • JBNJBN Posts: 1,918 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Nice thread.
    Began collecting at 7. Roll searching. Filling the two Whitman Holders. ‘The Great Wheatstalk Act of 1968’ mandated saving all wheaties.
    Met advanced collector (father’s colleague). Taught me about going for high end 'BU' condition. Started working on uncirculated Washington Quarters and WLH short set. Completed sets prior to entering college in ‘75.
    Dormant (except for basic US mint products) for decades.
    While travelling (later in my career), started visiting coin shops. Bought ‘this and that’. Several early silver dollars. Started purchasing some slabbed coins. Purchase of a complete toned O mint Morgan Set in its original album focused collecting efforts on Morgans with attractive toning.
    Began high end WLH set in 2007. Added WLH proofs later.
    Sold the toned Morgans and other 'this and that'.
    Then a change to acquisition of coins that I could never have had as a kid:
    Liberty Seated Dollars.
    Liberty Seated Half Dollars.
    Also Capped Bust Half Dollars.
    Looking forward to adding Draped Bust Half Dollars.

  • WaterSportWaterSport Posts: 6,933 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Phase 1 - Snagged on a street corner by an antiques/coin selling woman with her own shop drumming up business.
    Phase 2 - Began to roll search cents to fill holes in a blue Whitman folder.
    Phase 3 - Too busy to collect – got bikes to repair, fish to catch, etc.
    Phase 4 - Consistently given coins because I was labeled a coin collector. Expanded to accept silver quarters, and junk silver.
    Phase 5 - Discovered girls!
    Phase 6 - Went to college.
    Phase 7 - Got married. Occasionally would drag the coin albums out and would get a few rolls to search.
    Phase 8 - Put missing coins on layaway now that I had a job.
    Phase 9 - Given a box of Capitol Plastic Boards in appreciation of helping a coworker sell his collection.
    Phase 10 - Moved all raw coins in most series into the Capitol Plastics Board.
    Phase 11- followed career – got divorced, got remarried.
    Phase 12 - Discovered eBay and had the money to buy the 1909 SVDB, 1914 D and 1922 Plain to finish the Lincoln set.
    Phase 13 - Got my 8-year-old started in collecting State Quarters. But he also got me looking more seriously at what I was collecting.
    Phase 14 - Given more stuff because I was a coin collector.
    Phase 15 - Got rid of everything – focused only on Lincolns and went for TPG coins because I was tired of getting expensive cleaned coins.
    Phase 16 - Started a PCGS Registry set of basic Lincolns – expanded to proofs and expanded to varieties.

    Proud recipient of the coveted PCGS Forum "You Suck" Award Thursday July 19, 2007 11:33 PM and December 30th, 2011 at 8:50 PM.
  • koynekwestkoynekwest Posts: 10,048 ✭✭✭✭✭

    1961-62-Whitman folder/coins from circulation phase
    1962-learned to cherrypick, mostly mainstream varieties phase
    1969-72-military and marriage-a somewhat dormant phase
    1972-1989-better quality raw coin complete set phase
    1989-2009-intensive cherrypicking, mainstream and lesser known varieties and full strike Buff 5c phase
    1992-2014-complete proof Buff 5c set made possible by cherrypicking phase
    2010-present-high color toned coin and reassembling of IH $2.50 gold phase

  • JustacommemanJustacommeman Posts: 22,852 ✭✭✭✭✭

    I’m on a final ten year plan. Complete my coin projects in five years and then sell the whole chabang in ten...........

    I always reserve the right to change my mind

    mark

    Walker Proof Digital Album
    Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
  • WildIdeaWildIdea Posts: 1,878 ✭✭✭✭✭

    Coin collecting and study is a long class for sure. An enjoyable one if you have the stomach to invest upfront in the learning curve.

    Every time I get to a point I think that may be it for me, something new comes along and pulls me back in. The last time was cast satiracle medals from WW1 and I was running in that big time.....then Covid 19 hit and I just stopped altogether cold turkey. It triggered “Project Survival Mode” with only bills and bare essentials being covered until more stability gets nailed down.

    The last 20 years of my carrier just pushing so hard so I could cover all that and still have something amazing coin wise coming my way regularly. Now feeling that old lifestyle was over blown and played out. I have plenty to show for the effort. Recently, I’ve watched some killer pieces come and go I would have bought in a second last year and not even sad. I’ve stayed somewhat active here posting and reading and even started finding myself doing my old searches for the first time in months , just to look see, so who knows how long this will last. I like not buying coins right now, makes me feel more in control. A new phase for me for sure.

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