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Replies: 19 / Views: 2,100 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
749 Posts |
That Brett Favre rookie card means nothing to you. that Brett Favre rookie card means nothing to you. that Brett Favre rookie card means nothing to you. 
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Moderator
 United States
6563 Posts |
OK fine Lucky can have the one Brett Favre rookie card that means nothing to you and I'll take the other 7
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Pillar of the Community
United States
2600 Posts |
Come on GO, its' nothing but a thing...ee! Jim  Man I must be bored to tears. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
749 Posts |
Another great point on coin collecting ....Your saving money 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
792 Posts |
I've got a load of comics and sports cards that will probably never again be worth anything, that's why I kept comparing them to coins. Creaton, you hit the nail right on the head. There are WAAAY too many card companies, and each one has about 17 different series for each year. Beckett magazine has about 5 pages that covers years 19 fifty something to 19 ninety something (40+ years), then about 50 pages for about 10 years of cards from 199?-present..Coins rule!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1083 Posts |
US Type Coin Collecting makes all of us curators and preservers of American history.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1179 Posts |
Most all my cards come from the years 1987-1993, so they are not all that great. I have some that are worth a few bucks, upwards to 20 but nothing great. I have more in quantity, then quality :)
Grace, I always told myself i'd never sell these. My son, whenever I have one, would kill me I'm sure :)
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No longer with us
United States
207 Posts |
Agree with brefos77 about coin collecting being the best hobby!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1691 Posts |
collecting things with intrinsic value such as coins and stamps is a sound investment as well as lots of fun!
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Valued Member
United States
130 Posts |
I like the hunt. Filling holes in albums (especially the 7070) is enjoyable and reading about the coin and history in the era of a specific coin adds to the hobby.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1179 Posts |
This thread inspired me to blow off the dust of the totes I have full of sports cards. Wow, do I have some organizing to do, I should have never started. I'll let you know if I find anything worth a ton, doubt it tho :)
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Moderator
 Australia
16862 Posts |
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Presently I worry about our government ruining this hobby like they did with stamps. The massive amount of stupid stamps distroyed that hobby for everyone. Now they are starting that with coins. It makes them a lot of money in the short run but will stop people from collecting in the future when they see way, way to many coins to collect. For now the only advantage is what you collect today you can still deposit in a bank tomorrow and only loose the possible interest you would have if that money was there in the first place. As noted the sporting card craze ended due to the massive production of those cards by everyone. My kid too had boxes and boxes of them. He used to get them in 5,000 card boxes for $5. That really distroyed that hobby. Then we all remember Beanie Babies. Now selling for about $1 or $2 each. Same thing. Market flooded. Hot Wheel cars were selling for a lot not long ago but the market got flooded with to many so that ended. Our government is in the process of tons of commemoratives, State Quarters and now numerous baby dollars no one wants. At this rate there soon will be less and less interest for new collectors seeing way to many to even start or try to start collecting. Another great hobby distroyed. However, there is always the bank to get rid of them. Remember the Bicentennial Quarters. My freind had thousands and I had hundreds. No one wants them so they all went to the bank. At a coin show one dealer commically said I'll give you $0.24 each for them.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1083 Posts |
Carl, I agree that the market seems saturated with modern issues right now. Your point is that rather than stimulating interest in collecting, that newbies will be over whelmed by the sheer number of issues and give up the hobby. I am not sure that is true, but one thing I believe. Interest in the old issues, even more modern ones like Wheaties and Buffalo nickels, will continue to increase. They aren't making any more of them, they are relatively valuable in decent condition, and they represent history. If new collectors turn away from the moderns, they may naturally turn to the older issues. It is a much better feeling to have something in your bank box that has value, than a bunch of modern proof or mint sets that actually depreciate in value over time from their purchase price.
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Forum Kid
Kuwait
1523 Posts |
You give a girl some coin they've never seen before in a key chain for a value of $2 and they will go nuts ;)
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