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Replies: 45 / Views: 6,016 |
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Pillar of the Community
United Kingdom
2624 Posts |
I started collecting coins from my change, ad holiday money etc as most children do. This ended up amounting to quite a sizable collection of circulated and low value coins. Then when I started to work I started buying silver bullion coins (and rarely the odd gold one) but I still continue to collect anything unusual from my change.
I came to the conclusion a few years back that quality is better than quantity... I was not going to throw out the thousands of low value coins and the bullion type coins are not going anywhere (but I had also lost interest in obtaining more of those) so I started on an ancient coin collection. Every piece in it is entirely different to every other piece (it is a type collection) and each is carefully selected and of reasonable value. This to me is more satisfaction than I have had from collecting modern coins in a long time.
I also collect banknotes, which started as saving any fresh note with a new signature that I came across and ended up as an extensive collection of every denomination and signatory to appear on British banknotes. When I travelled America the small head notes had just been replaced with the large head varieties, so I collected them all... and when I visited Vegas they had been replaced with colourised ones so I collected those. This gave me the taste to start collecting USA notes too...every denomination, every colour seal and every type is the goal there.
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Valued Member
United States
343 Posts |
I'm more of a quantity collector. Since a lot of coins are more than a house payment for me, I stay on the cheaper side, but it still makes me happy. Amazing how a G Barber dime still makes me smile for a few days.
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Moderator
 United States
189767 Posts |
Quote:I'm more of a quantity collector. Since a lot of coins are more than a house payment for me, I stay on the cheaper side, but it still makes me happy. Amazing how a G Barber dime still makes me smile for a few days. The right attitude! 
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Valued Member
Finland
79 Posts |
Quantity or quality? For me it both and neither...LOL!
My interest lies more in the history side, than numismatic side of things. Hence I tend to collect coins and banknotes of only certain countries and of very specific era ... in my case it's Third Reich and Soviet Union; the two powers in Europe that have had quite an effect in history. Since I am more interested in historical aspect, I have zero interest in UNC coins. Though officially released for circulation, for me a particular coin is just a lump of metal, unless it has been used for a real transaction, during it's time of issue. Most joy I seem to get of circulated, but nicely preserved coins...
Sure, from investment point of view this is wrong approach, but fortunately my collecting is just for fun. Heck, it's the fun part that makes me drive a 1970 Buick Gran Sport during summer, from financial point of view that too is just crazy, considering the fuel prices here in Scandinavia :D
-JJ-
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1795 Posts |
When I first started it was quantity not quality that motivated me especially with the silver coins. Later quality became the primary focus of my collecting. I've completed my franklin collection and they are all quality coins. I have a complete Kennedy and Roosevelt collection (all quality coins) to date and currently working on my herd of Buffalo's, where I bought less expensive examples than the high quality and high dollar coins. I do have some very High quality coins that were reasonable and in my budget a with the Buffalo's. I also am working on my Commemoratives and I stay with higher quality coins with those as well. So to sum all of this up I usually strive for the higher quality coins but will use lower quality when the cost is prohibitive.
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Pillar of the Community
Russian Federation
5178 Posts |
I think I'll have to post another answer (or maybe a clarification to my existing answer). Because that's me too: Quote: I find myself wanting high grades of coins even if they are common dates. The reason for this in my case is to have a beautiful example of a certain type of coin rather than have every issue year of a particular coin. But my idea of "high grades" stops somewhere around XF/AU. I'm not going for anything MS unless it is extremely common and costs as much as XF or less... in particular, I try to stay away from shiny new coins that look like they were just taken from bank rolls (or, in some cases, are still in the rolls and taken out on request), but for some series (Turkmenistan 10 tennesi anyone?), it seems to be cheaper and easier to get the coin that way than to try and look for a less obviously new example. However, I also like to get old coins for cheap, which often means that they are in very low grade. And for some reason, I like them being in very low grade (when I can identify them, at least). In some cases (such as Victorian pennies), I've found myself actually looking for coins in particularly low grades (it helps, of course, that a Victorian penny can wear down an awful lot before the date becomes unreadable; often the date is nearly the only detail remaining to identify the coin as a Victorian penny).
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Valued Member
United States
123 Posts |
As a new collector with the advice of this forum, I have found that I lean towards quality. However, I have an online coin store, so when I see a large lot for sale that I can profit off of resaling, I buy it. For my personal collection, though, I prefer quality.
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Valued Member
United States
383 Posts |
I'm definitely a quality-seeker over quantity. That's not to say I don't pursue particular series in quantity, such as Early & Charlotte Half Eagles, and my most recent interest, Indian Quarter Eagles. I have passed on far more examples than those I've found acceptable. As I add representative dates of each series, my main goal is quality upmost, pursuing the best that I am willing to reasonably pay for the date/coin. Eye appeal, character & originality being the most important aspects.
ET
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Bedrock of the Community
Canada
11922 Posts |
I buy what I like, and there just happens to be so many coins I like  The ones I buy most often tend to be older, low grade world coins, which are typically cheap, and owning damaged coins does not bother me at all. I also do not sell coins. That being said, I would be a quantity collector.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1745 Posts |
I'd guess both. I have some really nice sets (BU Jeffersons, Dansco 7070, Lincolns, etc.). AND... I have tons of others, tubes, rolls, 2x2's, way too many (or not).
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New Member
United States
11 Posts |
I'm new to the forums but even before finding this place, I "decided" I would much rather have a higher grade collection of whatever coin I'm interested in. Even if it meant saving up for that better coin. Haven't been collecting for real long. Well, I can say that this just simply isn't always the case. If I start looking, I ALWAYS find SOMETHING I want in my current budget. It's a problem. Dang it ebay!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1316 Posts |
When I first started visiting the local shops and shows, it was more about quantity; and I'd often come home from the semi-annual show with 5-6 G/VG Classic coins rather than one or two XF coins. Over the last couple of decades, I've gravitated towards quality and finally have the self control to pass over a G coin knowing they patience will get me something better, eventually. This is especially true with US coins, where they are so abundant that I might as well hold out for the quality UNC w/ eye appeal that calls my name. For older world coins, if it's not damaged, has a clear date, and experience tells me they are uncommon, I'll take it as it is like it was my lucky day. To this day, leaving a show with only one or the coins eats at me; I feel empty handed and unfulfilled, so I'm constantly searching the discount bins for a little added quantity. I have no regrets because putting 5 coins into my collection when I get home is always more fun than one, and opening the box to a bonafied hoard is more fun than a mostly empty box with potential. I can say that my 6 year old step son only cares about quantity, and his eyes brighten up more when he sees me open my box because there are 100 coins in it, not because any are in a particular high grade. He's going to have more fun with me holding two worn down El Cazadore coins than than one XF Boliva 8 Reales every time. There will always be a home for those '82 G/VG coins with a clear dates and a good story, they keep the collection fun for me and the whole family :)
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Valued Member
United States
467 Posts |
I guess whether I collect quality or quantity is relative. I believe I collect both quality and quantity. Quantity because I like to collect series to completion. Quality because I like to collect the nicest examples of what I am after in my price range. For instance, if I collect a BU 1946-2016 Roosevelt dime set...my quality is what I consider a common nice looking uncirculated dime. However, to someone with a lot more money and discerning taste...they may consider that quantity, because they collect MS-66+ dimes, or something like that. There is a lot of room for degrees of quality when dealing with coins
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Valued Member
United States
96 Posts |
Now that I'm closer to sixty than fifty I find myself leaning to quality over quantity. Mercury dimes are my main passion. I'm not going to get into grades. Each person has a budget. Within my budget, I buy the coin, not the grade. Always have & I always will. P.S. I'll bet there are other folks here my age & older that will tell you we got our quantity out of our change everyday. As for me, I also collected many silver coins flipping quarters, dimes & fifty cent pieces in grade school with my lunch money. Back in the late sixties & early seventies I was a paperboy & I had to collect the bill every month from my customers. I think it was about .35 cents a month. Those were the good old days. Most people didn't think to save their silver including me. The only reason I accumulated so much is because I liked to save my change. Most of it just happened to be silver! And for you Lincoln lovers, I saved every penny I ever found until the early seventies when I met my first girlfriend..................
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Pillar of the Community
United States
589 Posts |
I'm still not sure whether its quantity or quality. With several hundred coins and each averaging @ 100, I would think it would be quality. The types of coins in my collection mostly Classic and gold @100 would surely fall under quantity. 
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Replies: 45 / Views: 6,016 |