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Replies: 28 / Views: 12,797 |
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
5029 Posts |
Used excel. Then went to Google Sheets. Both are easily tailored to what you want. Big picture for me is, I do not want to invest the time or money into a product that I have to learn and may or may not allow me the flexibility I had/have with excel/google sheets for my main inventory application. Nothing wrong with doing that if you desire. Just not my cup of tea.
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New Member
 United States
10 Posts |
Thank you everyone for your feedback. I am going to stay with Excel and do some Visual Basic programming to match the sophistication I am looking for. If that becomes too cumbersome I will move to Access.
After testing many of the options available (free trials with limited functionality) I am not impressed with any of them except for the images. What I will do is retrieve images of my coins online and save them as part of my own database.
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New Member
United States
1 Posts |
It looks like the two biggest / most well know software programs out there are Coin Manager, by Liberty Street https://www.libertystreet.com/Coin-...oftware.htm, and Coin Collector's Assistant by Carlisle Development http://www.carlisledevelopment.com/...for-mac.html Both appear to have mac and windows versions and companion phone apps, I believe. Many people also just use homemade excel spreadsheets. I'm considering buying one of the two above, but have not tried either one yet. Any users with pros, cons, comparisons?
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Moderator
 United States
189142 Posts |
 to the Community, BriHeller!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1298 Posts |
I haven't checked recently, but I believe the Liberty Street software does not support Mac.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
9792 Posts |
Yesterday the ANA had a new e-learning seminar covering this topic over zoom. It is the last seminar listed on this page titled: "Documenting Your Collection: Motives and Methods for Keeping Records of Your Collection" https://info.money.org/elearning-re...cd4aaf8f3e82It should be available soon on their YouTube channel keep checking back it usually takes them 10-14 days to get it posted after editing. Instructor Tim Ferreira covered most of these software packages and rolling your own, reasons why we all need to do this and covered everything from record keeping using a plain old paper notebook to online cloud storage. It was basic but still good. I myself roll my own as my collections are quite different than most. I collect primarily one series of coin ( Two Cent Pieces) and have hundreds if not thousands of them that all need records kept showing very slight variations between each of them with photographs and accessible online or offline on mobile devices for use at coin shows. So I write my own Filemaker Pro databases, not ideal but works for me, others I know build with excel or Open Office, which is harder to learn, but much more flexible in the long run.
"Buy the Book Before You Buy the Coin" - Aaron R. Feldman - "And read it" - Me 2013! ANA Life Member #3288 in good standing since 1981, ANS, Early American Coppers Member (EAC), Colonial Coin Collectors Club member (C4), Conder Token Collector Club member (CTCC), Civil War Token Society (CWTS) member, Liberty Seated Collectors Club (LSCC) & Numismatic Bibliomania Society member (NBS), USMex, Member in good standing, 2¢ variety collector. See my want page: http://goccf.com/t/140440
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New Member
United Kingdom
9 Posts |
For a newbie, recording coins in a spreadsheet, can someone give me pointers as to what they record for each coin?
Thanks!
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Moderator
 United States
189142 Posts |
My original sheets have: Year, Mint, Variety (when necessary), Value, Date (found or purchased), Paid, Grade, Notes (where bought or found, known provenance, etc.) When I started collecting graded Ikes I altered the columns for that sheet: Year, Mint, Variety, Value, Purchased (date), Paid, Grade, TPG (PCGS, NGC, etc), Registration (number on slab), Seller (where I bought).
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New Member
United States
3 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
465 Posts |
I also track with excel but I would prefer a simple software program where I could keep multiple pictures of my coins, save purchase price, varieties, notes and update values , upload info to a cloud all in one package. And I want it iPhone friendly. A few years ago I used a version of USA Coins that's apparently no longer available that I liked a lot. I lost the phone I had it loaded on. I can't believe I can't find anything in one simple package.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1298 Posts |
You might check out U.S. Coin for mac.
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New Member
United States
1 Posts |
A couple of years ago, I changed careers and decided to get into web development. While learning, I made a coin collecting site. I thought nothing of it, but then today I checked the database and their are about 80 people who signed up for it. Nobody is using it, because it's really bad, but if anyone is interested, I'd love to start over with it and make it good. The site is http://www.coininv.org I need to warn you that it's not good, but I have most of the US coins on there.
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Valued Member
United States
465 Posts |
Kpq1918
Do it, do it, do it!!!! I'd love a simple way to photograph and record multiples of the same date/mint mark. It would be good to have for insurance purposes too. Your site looks good to me so far.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3660 Posts |
Like @jbuck, my Excel sheets have changed over the years. I changed my spreadsheets a few years ago to use dropdown boxes. They are great time-savers.
My Excel spreadsheets currently have the following fields:
Number (auto-generated unique number, starting with 0000001) Acquisition Date (format: 2021.09.04 etc.) Denomination (0.005 to 20.00, dropdown) Major Type (dropdown) Minor Type (dropdown, default is blank) Year (text entry) Mint (dropdown) Quantity (dropdown, default is "1" and options include roll, bag, and other. I use notes if other is selected.) Grade (dropdown, with numerical or letter code choices) Slab (dropdown; default is "Raw") Certification Number (text entry) Designation (dropdown) Variety (text entry) Seller/Source (I use a personal coding system) Basis [Purchase price] (text entry, rounded to whole dollar) Sale price (text entry, rounded to whole dollar) Profit or Loss [formula] Tax year (dropdown) Sale date (format: 2021.09.04 etc.) Purchaser (I use a personal coding system) Commissioned purchase ("Yes" dropdown, no answer as default) Notes (text box) Notes 2 (text box)
My unique identifying number matches digital file folders with PDF scans of invoices and coin purchase and sale photos. These are the proof I need of the coin's condition, that the coin sold was the same coin purchased, and profit or loss.
Bulk coins (such as solid date rolls of common coins or generic rolls of junk silver) are entered as a group.
All of this information is backed up in the cloud and on hard drives, one of which is stored offsite. All of the actual coins are stored offsite (out of state, in fact), for security reasons, but my digital files provide all the information I need. With this information, and Greysheet, I can value any coin quickly. I don't use any valuation software, because it isn't updated enough and rarely reflects the actual market.
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Moderator
 United States
189142 Posts |
 to the Community, kpq1918!
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Replies: 28 / Views: 12,797 |
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