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Replies: 22 / Views: 2,640 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5964 Posts |
Yes you do Koinpro. From what I've seen, you have a very impressive collection. Just out of curiosity, and disregarding value, what are a few of your favorites?
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3463 Posts |
Those are pretty neat. The closet thing I have would be this anniversary card from Virg Marshall:  I have been tempted to pick that cent from the card to see if it is a WAM or not....
Edited by cwb 05/28/2015 9:21 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5964 Posts |
If it's not you could always re-glue it.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1781 Posts |
CoinMasters, My favorite collection is made up of numismatic items that were given to me over the years that have some special meaning. Included is a 1959 Mexican 20 centavos that my grandfather gave me when I was about 10. There is a high relief medal from the 1986 Garden State Numismatic Association Convention that Dr. King gave me after we had a long conversation and I admired his collection of Ike dollar Caps and other great errors. Then there is my dad's military medals and his badges from the United Steel Workers Conventions. There really are too many to list in this collection but every piece has a story. My second favorite collection is a single row coin box jammed full of high-grade Civil War tokens. It's the only set of anything numismatic that my daughter was fascinated with and I'll die with it and pass it on. There is a Barber half from the 1800s (I forget the date) that my great grandmother was awarded by an Art College in the 1880s for a water color. The half-dollar is engraved like a a love token with her name, the date of the award, what it was for and name of collage. I found a old picture of her in an antique frame and had the Barber half placed in a special Capitol holder I had made up for my dad. I inherited this when he passed on a few years ago. I named my daughter after my great grandmother. Then there is my metallurgical test patterns; several Dupont tokens, plancehts and coupons; GM Roller Press tokens (one is one of two known that I got from the GM Engineer that made it back in about 1964 -- I just ran into his business card today), the Olin Brass minute man token, Corelay® tokens, etc. Then there is my 1965 dime struck on a 90% silver planchet and maybe next is my 1992 and 1992-D Close AM cents. I have other collections that I don't do much with anymore but still appreciate like RPM cents and Laminations on Canadian small cents by date. Oh for some reason I like the Felix Schlag plaques that the MSNS had made to raise funds to create a memorial for his grave. They made 25 of these with a silver pattern made by Gallery Mint. It's a real nice plaque of large size suitable for hanging on a wall. I bought five of them at $250 each (like I need five!). I have well over 1000 dies and hubs that I love. Also and error coin collection that I look at every so often. I also have a neat collection of Mexican errors and one of Canadian doubled dies. Last but not least is my numismatic library. Not all in order of importance.
Edited by koinpro 05/28/2015 10:22 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3463 Posts |
Very impressive collection. I would imagine it would be quite a treat to see.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1781 Posts |
cwb, Ya, I get to see it every so often but not so often that it gets boring. It's surprising how many things I find in boxes in my safe that I haven't seen in 10, 15, 20 years. About a month ago when I dug deep there were some items I hadn't seen in 30 years.
Edited by koinpro 05/28/2015 11:27 pm
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5833 Posts |
Ken,
More like a museum collection you have! A labor of love.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1781 Posts |
It never seemed like a labor of love as I put it together but I really appreciate it today even if it isn't the greatest collection in the world. Just remembered, I enjoy my collection of weird fishing stuff.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1781 Posts |
Also have a nice comic book collection -- nothing golden age to speak of but nice high grade silver age. I guess my best comic is Hulk 181 in NM.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5833 Posts |
LOL! I also have silver age comic books and a few original comic art pieces in the 80's, sold most of it for my coin collections, I have to clear some space for other collectible, and the wife is complaining. I think I still have some original Silver Surfer, plus a few CGC graded comics.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1781 Posts |
I recently purchased just under 1000 mostly super hero comics in Mint, bagged and boarded. No indication that the fellow ever cracked one open. I mean super-mint. I purchased them for 30c each. Why? Idono!
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5833 Posts |
Ken,
Back in the 70's while I was still a youngster, one of the Comic book dealer I knew had a client that he saved every title of DC, and Marvel comic book that came out each month for him, and this client I saw would store it in what I think called TimeLok? Once you place it in, the condition stay the way the day you had it in. I was saying to myself, the storage for each cost many times more then the actual comics, but guess who is retiring and laughing at the bank after 20 years?
Comic books outperform the stock market during 1990's before it slump around 2,000's.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1781 Posts |
Ya, grade became everything when PCGS and NCG turned their eyes towards comic books and baseball cards. LOL
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Pillar of the Community
United States
5964 Posts |
 with Cwb, Quote: Very impressive and I might add, amazing. Thank you Koinpro.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
1781 Posts |
There are some amazing coins in the Coin & Die sets the Mint sold. They describe them as "one of the first strikes" and that they are!
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Replies: 22 / Views: 2,640 |
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