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Which Coins To Collect?

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Pillar of the Community
United States
2824 Posts
 Posted 12/03/2014  11:44 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add OcalaFlorida to your friends list
Now is a great time to get good deals on the silver year early dimes and Washington quarters.

I started by roll hunting fun and easy for dimes and nickels.

Lincoln Cent took awhile, nickels and dimes are fast. The nickels are fun with all the upgrading to full steps, etc

I would like to suggest that you also consider the Mercury dimes series.

I found that get 2 albums was a good way to work a nice dansco for the best pieces and then a Whitman cardboard one to downgrade into and as I upgrade I swap over
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5828 Posts
 Posted 12/03/2014  6:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ChildOfTheWheat to your friends list
I suggest LWC! I find that Wheat pennies are the cheapest, and yet most beautiful coin you can get on a tight budget. LWC are the best route to go when beginning coin collecting, although its quite a challenge finding some of the low mintage coins, like the 1909 S VBD, 1915 S, ETC.
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United States
8521 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  12:43 am  Show Profile   Check 52Raymo's eBay Listings Bookmark this reply Add 52Raymo to your friends list
Jeff nickels are the cheapest.
Oregon coin geek.....*** GO BEAVS ! ! ! ***
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Australia
21788 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  01:11 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list
I say Mercury dimes.

Don't cost much to buy in large lots. That makes it easier to build the guts of the collection, before setting out on the better grades or rarer dates mints and varieties, as you delve deeper into the study of them.

They look great in Unc. grades, especially with full bands. The 90% silver gives some precious metal interest for the common ones in lesser grades and help with the appearance of a collection of them, especially when they appear blast white. Well known and loved classic design.

Whitman and Dansco albums are readily available for them, although I prefer to keep my better ones in 2x2's in a non PVC pages album. You may be tempted to slab a few, but don't do it unless the potential value justifies the fees for a TPG grading.

You will have lots of friends here in the CCF, who already know a lot about them, and are willing to share what their knowledge.
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United States
3546 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  05:14 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add mdpmedia to your friends list
Hello,

I would answer this question similar in concept to how one should approach the decision of choosing a specific type of occupation to follow when studying the basics of that particular endeavor.

W/r/t to a job, for instance, one ideally should follow the route that leads to the most personal satisfaction. The same concept would apply when focusing in upon a particular coin or subset study of that coin in question.

Let's say that a collector relishes in the accumulation of rare dates/MM Ag(Morgan and Peace) coins and furthermore gets a thrill when performing research at his/her job that requires the use of an electron microscope detailing human cell growth anomalies, for example.

In this distinct case the subset study of silver dollar VAMs would more than likely qualify as a potential candidate to focus one's efforts.

In summary, similar to one's daily occupation if one finds a type of coin in which collecting or analyzing it never becomes boring, I'd say that it's a good bet to start off with that type of coin obviously considering available time and financial restraints.

mdpmedia
Valued Member
United States
118 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  06:22 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Connicoins to your friends list
I started out with Jefferson nickels, but quickly fell in love with the Lincoln Penny. Also, with my budget I can afford rolls of pennys. I recently learned that they may not mint the eagle back quarter, so I have started to save all of those. But those pretty pennies are my weakness....have fun and enjoy your new found hobby. I know I do !
New Member
United States
32 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  11:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add fayster to your friends list
Thanks for this thread, it has really helped me. My brother-in-law is big into stacking silver and convinced me to 'invest' part of my savings that way. Well, that's ok - and I did - but it caused me for the longest time to not appreciate just collecting coins. Then the whole 'coin collector' thing just seems so overwhelming. I mean, you guys have been doing it since forever. How is a newbie supposed to jump in? I like the idea of the Mercury dimes, Jefferson nickels and Eisenhower dollars. Doable, affordable.

Would like more of an explanation of "roll hunting" and other ways/places to start looking. Thanks!
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United States
189767 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  11:35 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
Would like more of an explanation of "roll hunting" and other ways/places to start looking. Thanks!
You can start by reading topics in the Coin Roll Hunting forum.
Pillar of the Community
United States
1158 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  2:04 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add tkbslc to your friends list
I think collection modern coins out of change and rolls is incredibly boring. It's the stuff you see every day and even when you are done with a whole album/folder, you just have a big book of coins worth a few percent over face value. And collecting a full set of older coins can get very expensive.

I would recommend starting with a type set and save up and buy one nice example of each coin type at a time. A 20Th century U.S. type set can be pretty affordable, aside from the Barber half dollar in high grade. You'll end up with some excellent coins and by the time you are done, I am certain you'll know what kind of coin you are drawn to most and would like to collect more of. Most of the coins are available from $5-25 dollars in high grade and the rare ones are in that range for low grade if you don't want to spend more.

Just a thought. Especially since you don't know what you want, just collect one of each!
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1325 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  2:13 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add shadz to your friends list
All of them...


It all began with a Whitman Cent folder...
get the folder for what you think you will want first if you want circulated, because hey why spend big bucks on worn coins?

Once you have a folder, get a box of coins:
$1000 dollars
$500 halves/quarters
$250 dimes
$100 nickels
$25 pennies

Then you start filling it with the coins you find and spend the rest or if you are lucky enough to have a dump bank* you can jsut get more coins and keep going.

*dump bank: some people are able to go to the bank with their unrolled coins and dump them into a coin counter and the bank will give them money for them. This would be a second bank, not the one you get your coins from.

Quarters would be easy to finish since you have the states, you only need clad 1965~1998 and ATB.

Be prepared to find all manners of foreign coins in boxes. You might want to look for a folder for Canadian cents while they still exist, because the cents aren't made anymore and they occur often in boxes of pennies.
Edited by shadz
12/04/2014 2:14 pm
New Member
United States
32 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  3:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add fayster to your friends list
jbuck: yeah...I saw that after I posted. that's a whole huge subject on its own, obviously.
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United States
1804 Posts
 Posted 12/04/2014  3:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Domain555 to your friends list
TiKiFrance



I like Eisenhower dollars.

Some times you can get a few or a $1,000 for FACE.

If you are willing to ask many bank tellers, you will surely get more than a few. From one teller I got 80.

If you can work with Head Tellers, and Bank Managers, maybe you can get $1,000 bags of IKEs for FACE.
Valued Member
United States
179 Posts
 Posted 12/05/2014  07:34 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add ambro51 to your friends list
You're not going to like reading this. Collecting modern issues from circulation is a waste of time. You'll not create value, nor learn much about numismatics. True, rarities exist but I'll bet 99.8% of new collectors will not find them casually and quickly looking through change. Go back in time for your collecting. Let your dates be 18XX instead of 20XX. Inexpensive "worthwhile" collections can be attractive Indian cents in VF-XF. A book on Hard Times Tokens can open Worlds of interest. Buy some BOOKS also!
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189767 Posts
 Posted 12/05/2014  10:01 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add jbuck to your friends list

Quote:
jbuck: yeah...I saw that after I posted. that's a whole huge subject on its own, obviously.
It can be a lot of fun, well, it used to be a lot of fun. It is getting more and more difficult to do these days. I quick actively searching rolls around the turn of the century, although some do come my way on occasion, for various reasons.
New Member
United States
10 Posts
 Posted 12/05/2014  10:28 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add TikiFrance to your friends list
I'm not looking to obtain a valuable collection. Just fun inexpensive collecting with the goal of obtaining all Lincoln Cents from 1909-present or all Jefferson nickels from 1938-present with the opportunity of finding the occasional rarity.
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