Mint packaging overload

As a collector of modern bullion gold and silver coins, I feel like I am being inundated with mint packaging. The small blue boxes are okay, but the heavy packaging that comes with First Spouse coins, Proserity sets, UHRs, etc., is eating up a lot of space in the SDB. While I understand that, down the road, the coins might be more saleable with the packaging, I am fed up with the space that it takes up.
I am considering taking all of the coins out of the packaging and storing the packaging in the basement, while leaving the coins in the SDB. Has anyone here ever considered or done the same? I know that Perry Hall will soon come along and tell me that I am risking a break-in by publicly admitting to possibly storing the packaging in the basement...
On a related topic, I wish the Mint offered the option of not receiving the heavy packaging. It looks expensive and is a waste of resources, IMO. I would like the ability to have a $5 or $10 discount to just receive the coin and not the solid faux mahogany box line with Corinthian leather, etc.
I am considering taking all of the coins out of the packaging and storing the packaging in the basement, while leaving the coins in the SDB. Has anyone here ever considered or done the same? I know that Perry Hall will soon come along and tell me that I am risking a break-in by publicly admitting to possibly storing the packaging in the basement...

On a related topic, I wish the Mint offered the option of not receiving the heavy packaging. It looks expensive and is a waste of resources, IMO. I would like the ability to have a $5 or $10 discount to just receive the coin and not the solid faux mahogany box line with Corinthian leather, etc.
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Comments
Maybe you can sell the boxes on eBay. Be vague so people bid big thinking they're getting the coin, too, and you'll land a windfall.
I've decided not to cut the rest of the little buggers out of their TPG slabs though
boxes. Coins in safe or SDB.
Some coins have been sold off and now I just have the boxes. Got the coins graded and just forgot
about the packaging and now what to do?
bob
But yes, the packaging situation is frustrating, but I fear the mint will keep churning it out!
<< <i>Has anyone here ever considered or done the same? >>
You bet!
I have a cardboard box in a closet labeld OGP. Not safe from fire or recycling crazed burglars but it works for me.
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
I just noticed that Longacre is here. I thought he was still in China. I fear that I am about to be chided for starting, not one, but two, threads regarding modern coins.
but insome cases even this will go in favor of rolls.
Be careful with the packaging though since it can deteriotate.
Some of the packaging is very nice - wooden boxes and all - it is tough for me to pitch perfectly good stuff.
I wonder how many people actually display these mint products in their full packaging.
... to not buy them in the first place or flip them so quickly that you hardly knew they were ever there.
Yes. My two Jefferson spouse coins and my one UHR coin are in their capsules in a flip in a double row box in the SDB.
The bulky boxes and papers are on a high storage shelf at home with such things as rolls of state quarters and presidential dollars, boxes of nickel rolls, coffee cans of pennies, bags of foreign coins, and miscellaneous albums of coins not worth putting in the valuable SDB space.
Liberty: Parent of Science & Industry
I don't buy current mint products thus I don't have any of these terrible packaging woes and problems. You've somehow managed to convince me I'm not really missing out on anything. I had been a little worried about it but ...
Everything else is just capsules with the boxes stored at home in an old Mint shipping box.
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<< <i>I don't buy current mint products thus I don't have any of these terrible packaging woes and problems. You've somehow managed to convince me I'm not really missing out on anything. I had been a little worried about it but ...
The mint has been putting coins in packaging at least since
they made the "king of Siam Proof Set".
The nice thing about packaging is if you ever get tired of it
then you can just throw it away. The big wholesalers are
said to fill up several dumpsters on a continuing basis. Just
a few proof sets can fill up a whole garbage can and you still
get to keep the coins.
Maybe it's just cyclical...
Well Buy a safe and put it at home with the empty packaging inside. This will do two things, free up room at the bank and if you are robbed, they will get only packaging.
<< <i>What the heck...SDB ohhhh........ Safety Deposit Box....gotcha
Well Buy a safe and put it at home with the empty packaging inside. This will do two things, free up room at the bank and if you are robbed, they will get only packaging. >>
Devilish. I like it.
"Inspiration exists, but it has to find you working" Pablo Picasso
I knew it would happen.
I also have the packaging from some of the first spouse issues when certain someone's bought the gold coins but didn't want the packaging
I also still have the UHR books (2 of them) unopened. I should really go to ebay and sell some of this crap.
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
<< <i>If the Mint had a decent business plan, they would be selling industrial shelving to hold all of their packaging.
Lol.
I think it was back in 1999 that one proof set customer recieved the proof set
pachaging except for the coins and shell. Instead there was just a sheet of
steel that had the same weight as a proof set. The coin papers suggested
it was an experiment related to shipping that was inadvertantly sent out but
maybe they were experimenting with a whole new business plan.
I no longer have any modern bullion but when I did the packaging was quick to be tossed. As you noted it takes up a lot of space. For the most part I had it all slabbed and stored it that way. The re-sale value in a slab is usually the same or better than having the original packaging and takes up a considerablly less amount of space.
If that is the case, why do yahoos like Bochiman insist on trying to pawn that other crap off on buyers?
<< <i> The re-sale value in a slab is usually the same or better than having the original packaging and takes up a considerablly less amount of space.
If that is the case, why do yahoos like Bochiman insist on trying to pawn that other crap off on buyers?
There is an after market for the packaging alone, just does not seem to matter much when it's with the original contents.
For me trying to ship the packaging always added a big cost due to the weight and size of box needed. Can't really use a padded envelop or one of the hand flat rate priority VHS boxes.
<< <i>As a collector of modern bullion gold and silver coins, I feel like I am being inundated with mint packaging. The small blue boxes are okay, but the heavy packaging that comes with First Spouse coins, Proserity sets, UHRs, etc., is eating up a lot of space in the SDB. While I understand that, down the road, the coins might be more saleable with the packaging, I am fed up with the space that it takes up.
I am considering taking all of the coins out of the packaging and storing the packaging in the basement, while leaving the coins in the SDB. Has anyone here ever considered or done the same? I know that Perry Hall will soon come along and tell me that I am risking a break-in by publicly admitting to possibly storing the packaging in the basement...
Already there. All the coins are out and in the safe, boxes have been backed up and put in the attic with dry packs. Takes up ALOT LESS ROOM!
On a related topic, I wish the Mint offered the option of not receiving the heavy packaging. It looks expensive and is a waste of resources, IMO. I would like the ability to have a $5 or $10 discount to just receive the coin and not the solid faux mahogany box line with Corinthian leather, etc. >>
Fred, Las Vegas, NV
<< <i>
<< <i> The re-sale value in a slab is usually the same or better than having the original packaging and takes up a considerablly less amount of space.
If that is the case, why do yahoos like Bochiman insist on trying to pawn that other crap off on buyers?
There is an after market for the packaging alone, just does not seem to matter much when it's with the original contents.
For me trying to ship the packaging always added a big cost due to the weight and size of box needed. Can't really use a padded envelop or one of the hand flat rate priority VHS boxes. >>
I've always suspected there will be a premium for a lot of
the modern packaging in the long term. I believe that as fast
as the sets are being destroyed the packaging is going even
faster. While the sets are safe in a safety deposit box the
packaging gets ruined in a damp or flooded basement.
Of course this can't occur until after original sets acquire a
premium to the coins and they're at a discount now days.
<< <i> The re-sale value in a slab is usually the same or better than having the original packaging and takes up a considerablly less amount of space.
If that is the case, why do yahoos like Bochiman insist on trying to pawn that other crap off on buyers?
Well, I know I would be more likely to visit MY DOCTOR if they had the OGP laying around in their waiting rooms, instead of all the stale ol' magazines! I mean, how many times can one read the same Goofus and Gallant????
I've been told I tolerate fools poorly...that may explain things if I have a problem with you. Current ebay items - Nothing at the moment
I did it too.
<< <i>Didn't this phenomenon help kill the Prestige sets?
Maybe it's just cyclical... >>
The current regular proof set is bigger than some of those prestige sets.
Since the mint's coin capsule is not air tight, from a safety standpoint, I would not store any coin in the Original mint packaging. Keep the packaging so you have it when you sell any of the coins, just keep the capsules in an archival environment where they are safe.
Planchet
<< <i>Although I do not have this problem as I have nothing that came with an OMP, from an conservation point of view, I have a concern with the OMP and whether it is safe for long term coin storage. As far as I know the mint has not disclosed whether it's packaging is made from archival paper that is both acid and ligin free. Nor has it disclosed whether the glue used in the packaging is archival or like many glues, emits a gas that may or may not react with metal surfaces. Nor have they disclosed whether other parts of the packaging may also emit gas over time that react with coin surfaces.
Since the coin capsule is not air tight, from a safety standpoint, I would not store any coin in the Original mint packaging. Keep the packaging so you have it when you sell any of the coins, just keep the capsules in an archival environment where they are safe.
>>
There's no question that the '68 to '81 mint set "cellophane" isn't suitable
for long term storage.
<< <i>
<< <i>Although I do not have this problem as I have nothing that came with an OMP, from an conservation point of view, I have a concern with the OMP and whether it is safe for long term coin storage. As far as I know the mint has not disclosed whether it's packaging is made from archival paper that is both acid and ligin free. Nor has it disclosed whether the glue used in the packaging is archival or like many glues, emits a gas that may or may not react with metal surfaces. Nor have they disclosed whether other parts of the packaging may also emit gas over time that react with coin surfaces.
Since the coin capsule is not air tight, from a safety standpoint, I would not store any coin in the Original mint packaging. Keep the packaging so you have it when you sell any of the coins, just keep the capsules in an archival environment where they are safe.
>>
There's no question that the '68 to '81 mint set "cellophane" isn't suitable
for long term storage. >>
Just Dip it!
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<< <i>
<< <i>Didn't this phenomenon help kill the Prestige sets?
Maybe it's just cyclical... >>
The current regular proof set is bigger than some of those prestige sets. >>
Have you seen the prices on later Prestige Sets lately?
It seems to me that OGP adds as much if not more value than TPG packaging.
The American Legacy sets are the "next generation" Prestige sets. I try to buy the coin and not the plastic but sometimes the OGP adds value as does the TPG slab.
Anyone buy the Lincoln Coins and Chronicles set? Same coins could be had for much less, but are generating 16x issue value in the special packaging!
Don't underestimate the value of plastic, even though you should "buy the coin and not the plastic"
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BONGO HURTLES ALONG THE RAIN SODDEN HIGHWAY OF LIFE ON UNDERINFLATED BALD RETREAD TIRES
<< <i>
<< <i>
<< <i> The re-sale value in a slab is usually the same or better than having the original packaging and takes up a considerablly less amount of space.
If that is the case, why do yahoos like Bochiman insist on trying to pawn that other crap off on buyers?
There is an after market for the packaging alone, just does not seem to matter much when it's with the original contents.
For me trying to ship the packaging always added a big cost due to the weight and size of box needed. Can't really use a padded envelop or one of the hand flat rate priority VHS boxes. >>
I've always suspected there will be a premium for a lot of
the modern packaging in the long term. I believe that as fast
as the sets are being destroyed the packaging is going even
faster. While the sets are safe in a safety deposit box the
packaging gets ruined in a damp or flooded basement.
Of course this can't occur until after original sets acquire a
premium to the coins and they're at a discount now days. >>
I agree! All you have to do is watch Antiques Roadshow to realize that this packaging will become very valuable at some point. I personally find that the packaging adds hugely to my historical and aesthetic appreciation of the coins. Look at the GSA CCs. You take one of those out, read the accompanying literature, and just imagine the stories behind the coin. But yes, I also am forced to separate coin and packaging these days.