When we used to pull coins out of circulation to fill holes in whitman books it was a hobby. When we began pulling out the checkbook to add to collection it became an industry.
It is both hobby and industry. That's the way it is when there is big money as well as little money being thrown around. It's inevitable; it's human nature.
Both - just like previously said. For the collector it's a hobby, but with peeps throwing big bucks around, it has become and industry to a lot of people...
Cecil Total Copper Nutcase - African, British Ships, Channel Islands!!! 'Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup'
A hobby is what the individual does and an industry is what collectors do in aggregate. Though to some it is first, foremost, and always a way to earn a living or to make money and to others it can be a livelihood and a ton of fun. So long as anyone is willing to pay more than face/melt or buy coin supplies then it will be an industry too.
I've never sold a coin. That presumably makes it a hobby for me. If you sell a coin to buy a coin I suppose that you could still claim hobby. When you start to make a living from selling it becomes more of an industry for you.
Most collectors would like it to be a hobby. Unfortunately, when substantial money is involved it takes on being an industry whether the collector likes it or not. I recently went thru my collection and pulled out about 20 coins, very nice ones at that, that were in market unacceptable slabs. They are now being crossed over at "any" grade. If I were viewing coin collecting as purely a hobby I wouldn't have cared what holder they were in. Unfortunately, they do involve significant money so future salability is important.
it's a hobby but it's grown to the point where it involves quite a few various industries on a moderate level. i work in the plastic industry myself, and we all know how that's involved in the hobby. things have evolved into big money and bigger business.
Its a racket to Littleton and Acuchump, It's an industry to most honost dealers and its a hobby to me.
Les
The President claims he didn't lie about taxes for those earning less then $250,000 a year with public mandated health insurance yet his own justice department has said they will use the right of the government to tax when the states appeals go to court.
<< <i>Hobby for true collectors. Industry for most dealers. >>
Agreed.
My grandfather, a button collector, came up with a way to make buttons from coal and watch crystals. He'd trade them to other collectors for buttons he wanted. He told me many times how button collecting was a fun hobby because the difference between a common old button and a rare one was no more than about $20, and there wasn't enough money in it for sharks to get involved.
He died, and my grandmother who by then had the collection died a few years later. One of my grandmother's long-time button collecting friends (a nice elderly lady) suggested to my parents that a particular midwest antique dealer who dealt in buttons might buy the collection intact, and my parents sold it to that dealer. Some research after the fact revealed the dealer auctioned the collection off and probably took in 10x what my parents were paid. I suspect the nice elderly lady either got a finder's fee or the equivalent in buttons out of the set. Even later we found out my grandfather's homemade buttons were listed in a couple catalogs and were considered collectible!
As Placid said, a hobby for true collectors, but an industry for most dealers (and some collectors as well).
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
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EVP
How does one get a hater to stop hating?
I can be reached at evillageprowler@gmail.com
You know, there's also a bowling industry and a camping industry.
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
Total Copper Nutcase - African, British Ships, Channel Islands!!!
'Do not meddle in the affairs of dragons, for you are crunchy and taste good with ketchup'
Though to some it is first, foremost, and always a way to earn a living or to make money
and to others it can be a livelihood and a ton of fun. So long as anyone is willing to pay
more than face/melt or buy coin supplies then it will be an industry too.
Ken
Tom
it's a hobby but it's grown to the point where it involves quite a few various industries on a moderate level. i work in the plastic industry myself, and we all know how that's involved in the hobby. things have evolved into big money and bigger business.
al h.
CoinPeople.com || CoinWiki.com || NumisLinks.com
I think you know the answer to your own question.
Experience the World through Numismatics...it's more than you can imagine.
Les
My 1866 Philly Mint Set
<< <i>Hobby for true collectors. Industry for most dealers. >>
Agreed.
My grandfather, a button collector, came up with a way to make buttons from coal and watch crystals. He'd trade them to other collectors for buttons he wanted. He told me many times how button collecting was a fun hobby because the difference between a common old button and a rare one was no more than about $20, and there wasn't enough money in it for sharks to get involved.
He died, and my grandmother who by then had the collection died a few years later. One of my grandmother's long-time button collecting friends (a nice elderly lady) suggested to my parents that a particular midwest antique dealer who dealt in buttons might buy the collection intact, and my parents sold it to that dealer. Some research after the fact revealed the dealer auctioned the collection off and probably took in 10x what my parents were paid. I suspect the nice elderly lady either got a finder's fee or the equivalent in buttons out of the set. Even later we found out my grandfather's homemade buttons were listed in a couple catalogs and were considered collectible!
As Placid said, a hobby for true collectors, but an industry for most dealers (and some collectors as well).
New collectors, please educate yourself before spending money on coins; there are people who believe that using numismatic knowledge to rip the naïve is what this hobby is all about.
<< <i>Hobby for true collectors. Industry for most dealers. >>
In other words, it's both.