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Replies: 22 / Views: 3,495 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5825 Posts |
Other possibilities: -- a high grade (MS-65 or better) US birthyear set; business strikes AND proofs. -- a worldwide birthyear set
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7196 Posts |
I have found collecting commemoratives fofilling. Modern dollars and older silver halves all with different designs makes an album something to study instead of a quick glance.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2661 Posts |
I sort of know what you are saying. I will go hard on one particular type of coin for a while then get bored with it. When that happens I move on to something else for a while such as pre WWII world coins or notes. Over the years I have built up a nice eclectic collection/hoard that would make most collectors happy. The only exceptions to this are Ike's, Merc's, & Morgans, I am always on the lookout for those.
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Valued Member
Canada
316 Posts |
I'm working on a couple of sets. I've got my canadians coin, world coins birth year set, world silver and dictator notes set. I just keep going around, When interests starts to fade I move to another set, and go round from there, things build up pretty quickly and not so expensive.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
17884 Posts |
If you like varied coins then take a cue from thai-vic. You can build a large collection with every coin different with even just a modest budget by doing world type.
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Pillar of the Community
Canada
1118 Posts |
Junk bin hunt a WW2 set! Vichy France, steel cent, Canadian V for Victory nickels, Mint mark above Monticello nickels, Third Rich, etc. etc.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1116 Posts |
This thread is quite interesting for me. I never really gave a thought to the foreign coins that I accumulate through roll searching the cent boxes.
Now I have another outlet for my coin collecting interest.
Thanks.................
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Pillar of the Community
1325 Posts |
I am not bothered with getting flying eagls, or indian heads. They are great when I find them, but like MErcury, I will probably never have them. I am working mostly on birth year design coins and up. Haven't finished that yet, so still plugging onward. Think I have cents and nickels covered, but missing some Roosevelt dimes (1964~), Washington quarters (1932~1998), Kennedy halves (1964~), and Ike dollars (1971~1978). Not sure what I will do when I finish those up. Probably just keep hoarding wheats and go for the elusive SBAs, SACs, Pre$s, and then move on to franklins/walkers and buffs.
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Valued Member
United States
234 Posts |
Quote:I've only been into this heavy for a few months now and I'm finding I am really bored with the half dollar sets I was trying to put together. After I have a few of each kind, I have a hard time feeling like a need more. I have 30 or so out of my intended full Kennedy set and I just feel like why do I want more of the same coin! I am about to give up on Franklin halves after only 3. They all look the same. What's the point? I am enjoying my 20th type set album a lot, though. I only have 3-4 coins left to fill it. Are there any other coin collectors who tire easy of trying to collect so many of the same coin? What other kinds of sets are you putting together? I've never actually tried a set, so I can't say for sure, but I'd bet I'd get bored trying to complete a date set of just about any series. I tend to just collect whatever interests me. Lately I've gotten quite interested in Seated dime and half varieties. I don't think I'd ever do a 7070 just because there are some series that I have no interest in (anything post-Barber). So, to summarize my rambling: I collect whatever I like at the time.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1391 Posts |
I don't blame you, I don't collect by series, date, mint mark or die state. I find it tedious and rather boring. So instead I collect coins by type, U.S. coins and world coins. If it is a unique type it goes in the collection.
This is nothing against collectors who do so by series or any other thing, it just isn't for me. I am happy when people post their series and I like looking at the pics. And I am genuinely happy when someone is able to get a difficult to find piece for their set. We are all coin collectors so their is some comradely in that sense, and one of the great thing about coin collecting is that you can collect how ever you want to collect. It is a hobby, not a tax form.
One of the most important things to understand is that even with coin collectors, is that there are different types of coin collectors. Every month or someone will post a topic about how one certain way is only proper and then try to relegate the other types of collections to "hoards," "accumulations," "piles" or what ever. Just smile and don't get sucked into the topic.
Some people like to stack silver, some people like to coin roll hunt, some people like to fill albums. I have a small silver stack because for a while that is what I thought coin collecting meant. I have some boxes of copper and a pile of wheat cents because I thought that that was collecting. I have some mint sets, some proofs, and some albums, etc.
It took me a while but I found out that I am more on the historian/numismatist side of the hobby. I like to learn about the countries and the circumstances behind a coin, go to the library and find a book on some ancient country that no one remembers any more, or read about some king who has long been forgotten.
I think you found out that you are not a series collector. My suggestion is try some other things. What I started doing I just buying what ever looked interesting to me. Yes I had a odd collection, but after a while I could begin to see some clear pattens in what I had bought. It is a hobby, you are supposed to enjoy it. :D
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
And this is just one of the many facets of coin collecting. In most hobbies there are many ways to make things more interesting. With coins there are many different types of coins to collect. For example there are error collectors. There are Type set collectors. There are birth year. a special year, with Proofs, no Proofs, year only and so many ways to make the hobby interesting. Just always remember that coin collecting is supposed to be a hobby. If this hobby itself gets boring, there are many other hobbies around to keep yourself busy. For example Russian Roulet with a simi-auto. May not be spelled correct.
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Valued Member
United States
167 Posts |
It seems to me you are getting bored with collecting because you have a low budget and are most likely buying low end coins. If you were to buy higher end coins and/or UNC Coins in high grades and with a lot of character and toning the possibilities are endless. I just get the idea you are buying low end stuff thats circulated.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1158 Posts |
I'm not buying low grade coins. I might have to go VF on the barber half but everything else is AU or better. Most of my coins are BU.
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Moderator
 United States
16679 Posts |
I'm primarily an big old copper guy (Colonials/Large Cents). Never gets old. I don't know..I guess every collector finds his/her niche eventually.
swcoin.ecrater.com
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Valued Member
United States
487 Posts |
I can identify with what tkbsic is saying. I took off on the Eisenhower dollars and enjoyed it greatly. Then I did the Kennedy half dollars and felt a good sense of accomplishment.......but 3/4 through the Franklin's now and am losing steam fast. I started some type sets and am inspired anew. Also, I find myself looking through the type set albums much more than the other sets. When I get bored with something I just work on something else. Will I finish the Franklin's?....of course. Meanwhile I'm learning about some coins I've never been involved with and enjoying myself with renewed enthusiasm.
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