Is there any one coin you would sell everything for?

I have seen posts asking what coin is your dream coin, or what coin would you buy if money was no object.
However, what if you could own your dream coin, but you had to sell everything in your collection? Would you do it? For me, I would be tempted. My dream coin is the 1894-S Barber Dime. The Ice Cream Specimen is supposedly a G-4, and I would probably sell my entire collection just to buy that coin. However, my collection if probably not worth near what that coin is worth.
As a side note, what do you think the 1894-S Barber Dime Ice Cream Specimen in G-4 is worth today. I think it last sold for around $27,500 in 1981. Any guesses?
However, what if you could own your dream coin, but you had to sell everything in your collection? Would you do it? For me, I would be tempted. My dream coin is the 1894-S Barber Dime. The Ice Cream Specimen is supposedly a G-4, and I would probably sell my entire collection just to buy that coin. However, my collection if probably not worth near what that coin is worth.
As a side note, what do you think the 1894-S Barber Dime Ice Cream Specimen in G-4 is worth today. I think it last sold for around $27,500 in 1981. Any guesses?
0
Comments
Menomonee Falls Wisconsin USA
http://www.pcgs.com/SetRegistr...dset.aspx?s=68269&ac=1">Musky 1861 Mint Set
The name is LEE!
CoinSpace.com Founder
www.coinspace.com
And no to the OP's question. I would love to own many coins but wouldn't sell everything I have for some of them. Plus my kids are having fun with the coins I currently have even if its not worth much. My kids happiness are worth more than my happiness and desires
Many members on this forum that now it cannot fit in my signature. Please ask for entire list.
<< <i>Please educate me but what is the SOVIET DIME that the 2nd poster posted????? >>
It's a counterfiet acording to the Red Book.
And just maybe that 1796 half dollar mentioned above if the grade and look were right could do it for me.
A nice 1827 quarter, 1823 quarter, 1822 quarter eagle, 1804 dollar, nice half disme, etc....you get the picture. Keep in mind that my collection is not worth a fraction of any one of those coins, so parting with my collection for that kind of value is a no brainer.
Many members on this forum that now it cannot fit in my signature. Please ask for entire list.
I wished someone would have asked me a similar question a LONG LONG time ago along the lines of...
Is there any one woman you would be willing to lose half of everything for?
<< <i>Please educate me but what is the SOVIET DIME that the 2nd poster posted?????
And no to the OP's question. I would love to own many coins but wouldn't sell everything I have for some of them. Plus my kids are having fun with the coins I currently have even if its not worth much. My kids happiness are worth more than my happiness and desires
Hooray for Google!
It's in that article.
-Paul
Eat worms for a nice coin? Perhaps.
<< <i>Sell everything for one dream coin? No, never. Eat worms for a nice coin? Perhaps. >>
Perhaps? What's your hesitation?
There are lots of single coins I'd sell everything for. They all far exceed the value of the collection though. --jerry
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
When a man who is honestly mistaken hears the truth, he will either quit being mistaken or cease to be honest....Abraham Lincoln
Patriotism is supporting your country all the time, and your government when it deserves it.....Mark Twain
(Just think of city streets clogged with a hundred thousand horses each generating 15 lbs of manure every day...)
<< <i>Back in the early 1980s one of the finest examples of the 1792 half disme came up for sale at an auction. At the time I thought for about half a minute, "If I sold my collection, would I have enough money to buy that coin?" After a quick calculation I figured I would have had $100 grand if I sold everything. Good thing I didn't try it. I learned later that the consigner bought the coin back in the auction for than I could have raised. >>
That is the one coin I might be tempted by.
Millertime
Complete Dime Set
If the value was the same as my current collection then no way. I'd keep my current collection as it stands in a heart beat.
.....................................................
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>this one maybe LOL
I am willing to pay BIG MONEY for the 1923-D Soviet dime and/or the 1930-D Soviet dime. Please PM me if you have one for sale or if you find one that is for sale.
An authorized PCGS dealer, and a contributor to the Red Book.
I'd trade my collection for any single coin worth 50% more than my collection. It would be painful, but I'd do it.
But if the question were rephrased, and I had the opportunity to trade my whole collection for any one coin that was of the same value as my collection, the answer would be "Hell No!"
Doggedly collecting coins of the Central American Republic.
Visit the Society of US Pattern Collectors at USPatterns.com.
...but I think they will ask for $690K more (according to the RedBook)!
The obvious stipulation is that I get to continue collecting though.