Coin Community Family of Web Sites Join Thousands of Coin, Bullion, & Money Collectors
Royal Canadian Mint products, Canadian, Polish, American, and world coins and banknotes. Coin, Banknote and Medal Collectors's Online Mall Specializing in Modern Numismatics Vancouvers #1 Coin and Paper Money Dealer Join Thousands of Coin, Bullion, & Money Collectors 300,000 items to help build your collection! Royal Estate Auctions - $1 Coin Auctions








Username:
Password:
Save Password
Forgot your Password?


This page may contain links that result in small commissions to keep this free site up and running.

Welcome Guest! Registering and/or logging in will remove the anchor (bottom) ads. It's Free!

What Is Future Of Coin Collecting ?

To participate in the forum you must log in or register.
Author Previous TopicReplies: 35 / Views: 7,241Next Topic
Page: of 3
New Member
Canada
49 Posts
 Posted 06/18/2015  1:09 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Petrols to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I got into this racket when I was 4 or 5 , I was hiking with my parents and found a 40's silver quarter, and have always thought about how many could be hiding under floor boards of old saloons, I love spending hours hanging out in a coin store, looking for that one special piece I dont have yet, I don't mind dropping a spare couple thousand for the right piece. Ive told some of my close friends I collect coins the reaction is always the same "oh neat"
When I show them high grade teens .50 they are not impressed by the high detail, or the fact they are worth thousands of Dollars. more of a reaction of "you paid how much?!?!"
I don't often sell, nothing that actually has value to my true passion 02-10 .25
I don't hear or see young people buying high grade coins, or spending a whole pay cheque on a 2,000.00 .25 piece, I guess we are out there since I'm only 35
but I think I'm like a 1880's Red Cent few and far between .
I don't Collect because some day Ill make a few bucks, I collect because when I open my vault I can get lost for hours.
Pillar of the Community
augsburger's Avatar
Germany
1064 Posts
 Posted 06/20/2015  10:14 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add augsburger to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I collect mostly circulating coins, especially when I go to another country. That's what I like, going, finding the new coins, maybe fishing around in bins looking for older coins.

I'm British and don't particularly like old British coins, they're a bit samey for me. I will buy coins, but to make sets, so I have the British, German, Spanish and Austria sets of coins I can afford going back to maybe the middle of the 1800s or late 1800s.

But the finding, the collecting, that's what it's all about for me. I think the American way of collecting is a little bizarre in my opinion. I have nothing against people collecting all dates and making the set of one coin with the same design, but it doesn't do anything for me.

Collecting is about doing what you like doing, collect what you want to collect, make your own rules. Often people use other people's rules, which is fine, but I think your own way is better.
Valued Member
Orlando di Lasso's Avatar
Canada
55 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2015  04:44 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Orlando di Lasso to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I agree that people might lose interest once they get rid of physical money. However, the Canadian mint likes to put out a lot of collectibles made of silver and gold. Is it possible that people would keep collecting silver rounds or other types of tokens?
Bedrock of the Community
sel_69l's Avatar
Australia
21788 Posts
 Posted 07/02/2015  06:30 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
So long as a coin is more than about 50 years old, and is in better thanfine condition it could have some interest for me. That was about when silver was almost completely withdrawn from circulating currencies around the World.

The most interesting thing for me is the coin itself, NOT it's condition. The numismatic value of a coin HAS to be considered, but for me, it is of secondary importance.
Coinages from the very earliest ancient times, in all cultures, is what interest me.

In such a collection slabbed coins just present a huge problem in terms of display and storage. You don't find slabbed coins on display in museums!

I guess from what I have written here, I must be one of the 'old time ' type of coin collectors, that would have had similar approaches to mine, 100 years ago.
Edited by sel_69l
07/02/2015 9:21 pm
Bedrock of the Community
sel_69l's Avatar
Australia
21788 Posts
 Posted 07/03/2015  7:26 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add sel_69l to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I look in most coin shops and note what is on display, and compare that to 50 years ago.

THEN:
1. There was no new NCLT mint product on display or to be bought.
2. There were few, if any books on World coins, the notable exceptions being Friedberg and Yeomans
3. It was some time into the future that Mints around the World would see the large commercial opportunity to make new NCLT for the collector market.
4. The then current modern coin price guide catalogs were fairly modest in size and the rarer and slightly 'off the beaten path' coins, such as fractional gold, was only rarely published, this information only found in museum publications.
5. Bullion coins consisted of common date U.S. gold, and sovereigns.
6. Ancient coinage numismatics was supported by good research, but the information for these was only found in public libraries or museums. Such books could not be bought in coin shops, except by special order.

NOW:
1. New NCLT mint product in most coin shops makes up perhaps 80% of what is on display.
2. Krause World Coins covering the last four centuries is a great help to collectors of World coins.
3. Mints around the World now very strongly market their product potential collectors. A lot like this sort of modern product, most traditional numismatist collectors which are in a significant minority, show little interest in this material.
4. Information on U.S. fractional gold, patterns etc., is now much more easily found in modern numismatic publications.
5. Modern bullion coins are now easily available to this type of collector.
6. Good information on ancient coinages is now easier to obtain through a number of books published in the last 50 years, but the greatest advancement in this area of numismatics is in the development of electronic data bases.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

The development of coin forums such as the CCF has led to the dissemination of numismatic information, to the benefit of all who are interested in numismatics.






  Previous TopicReplies: 35 / Views: 7,241Next Topic
Page: of 3

To participate in the forum you must log in or register.



    




Disclaimer: While a tremendous amount of effort goes into ensuring the accuracy of the information contained in this site, Coin Community assumes no liability for errors. Copyright 2005 - 2026 Coin Community Family- all rights reserved worldwide. Use of any images or content on this website without prior written permission of Coin Community or the original lender is strictly prohibited.
Contact Us  |  Advertise Here  |  Privacy Policy / Terms of Use

Coin Community Forum © 2005 - 2026 Coin Community Forums
It took 0.21 seconds to rattle this change. Forums