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Replies: 22 / Views: 6,533 |
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Moderator
 United States
188952 Posts |
Quote: I don't know if its attractive, but I keep my coins in an old machinist's tool chest. Certainly not without a certain charm. I like it. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
992 Posts |
I like the Coin World Premier Coin slabs, I get to put a label on each coin with origin, number, denomination, year, mint and mintage, and Troy content, if any. I'd rather keep them all flat in drawers, for viewing, but the red boxes stack in the safe a lot better. The days are long gone where we could leave coin and stamp collections, gun cabinets, and other valuables out in the open in our living rooms, and show it to all who dropped by.
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
2208 Posts |
When I say "display," I mean when you take them out for special occasions to show off. I didn't mean having them out and being displayed permanently.
I do like the idea of the nice cabinets with the removable drawers.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1839 Posts |
I picked up one of these recently and I love it. There a little pricey but they're very high quality. I think they're made in Germany and exported to the states. You can get them with different kind of drawers. The one I bought is made to hold slabs. http://www.lindner-original.de/en/
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Valued Member
United States
115 Posts |
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
11951 Posts |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
992 Posts |
If you have a lot of coins to display, you might consider doing what a buddy collector of cartridges did for his collection of thousands of pieces. He bought two old armoires, the antique standing closets, and modified the interiors to hold dozens of large bakery trays, lined with cotton and felt. His collections sits nicely in the trays and is readily accessed. I've seen an old wooden flat file fixed up the same way, nicely refinished, sits out in the den as good furniture.
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Moderator
 United States
188952 Posts |
It is not a coin display party until GR58 shows up. 
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Rest in Peace
United States
17900 Posts |
I collect by date, rather that by type, so it's virtually impossible to find pre-made holders that fit my needs. In other words, I arrange my coins in my albums with all the dates together for all the denominations and mint marks I own. For me it is more fun to travel through history seeing all the coins that existed for a given date. As an example, 1866 is a super cool set with Indian Head cent, Two Cent, Three Cent Silver (that was a tough one), Three Cent Nickel, SL Half Dime, Shield nickel, SL Dime, SL Quarter (still need one of those), SL Half Dollar, and a nice PCGS SL Dollar. I don't foresee adding gold to THAT date. Since I do collect the coin - not the holder - I have about equal numbers of raw (unslabbed) and encapsulated coins. I set them up with the common 20 pocket pages for the minor coins, 12 pocket pages for the dollars, and 9 pocket pages for the encapsulated coins. I intersperse the pages so that all coins can be as close to their date as possible. I also use the very thick padded 3 ring binders with the zipper so that I never have to worry about one of the coins slipping out of it's page and disappearing down a rabbit hole. I've also made special holders out of acrylic for special sets that are all slabbed. It took a while to design the cutouts so that the slabs didn't move once they were placed in the holders, but it did work, eventually (and a couple of full sheets of acrylic later). Collectors who love their collections want to have them displayed nicely for THEMSELVES, more than for anyone else. The majority of us don't have too many friends or family who care anything about our collections (other than their value). So the time and money spent is for our own personal satisfaction. Collectors are creative. You have to be creative to make all the decisions about what to buy and when and for how much. Having all those coins in their own home is probably more important to US, rather than to anyone else. For those that just put them in a safe willy nilly, they are just as happy because that is THEIR decision, not one forced on them by someone else. In short (which I rarely am), how you display your collection should be a choice you make with the end result being that when you look at your coins AND YOU ARE HAPPY.
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Moderator
 United States
188952 Posts |
Well said.  Quote: So the time and money spent is for our own personal satisfaction. Collectors are creative. You have to be creative to make all the decisions about what to buy and when and for how much. Having all those coins in their own home is probably more important to US, rather than to anyone else. True. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
9395 Posts |
Quote: In other words, I arrange my coins in my albums with all the dates together for all the denominations and mint marks I own. I thought I was the only one who organized by date, rather than type. In my case, I do have all the more expensive coins in various safety deposit boxes, but I photograph each coin before it goes off to a bank vault. The manually-renamed filenames for each pic start with the date or date range (except for restrikes). I place links/shortcuts to all these images into a single folder so get sorted by date, country, and then denomination (by default). Unfortunately, there's currently a hodge-podge of old film pics, direct scans, and digital images of various ages. At some point, I'm hoping to have a complete set of uniformly-processed digital pics for each worthwhile coin.
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Rest in Peace
United States
17900 Posts |
Hey Pepacetonius - I match my photographs to my inventory code which I list on each holder which is especially helpful on those few occasions when I have multiple coins of the same date and mint mark, as with my Overton Halves and Newcomb Large Cents. So I use: 1857-P-0050-1A (for the obverse), 1B for the reverse, and 1C and 1D if the coin is encapsulated. That automatically sets up my coins in date, mint mark, and denomination in that order. This works well for US coins only, of course. I'm afraid I just don't spend that kind of time with my ancients or world coins. Tokens is another matter entirely...
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Pillar of the Community
United States
4211 Posts |
Great photos GR58~!! Nice displays also TBone! And yes it isn't a party till goldrush shows up. Nice stuff 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
9792 Posts |
When coin dealing back in the early days of my life, I always had some nice jewelry trays of various eye catching color (RED & BLUE) as well as a larger black one (velvet) that I put out my nicer raw coins on - they always sold that way. I also used a small clear acrylic rod about 1" tall by 1/2 inch wide that I put a coin on over a small round mirror. My table displays always looked great, so I was told, and usually the most attractive ones at any show I went to. I also had a Laser Writer (one of the first laser printers made) from Apple the year they came out in 1985, and always had nice graphical signs and small cutout paper cards with bits of information on the coins. Though that is not really practical for long term displaying of a collection unless you have the room to leave out showcases. My main display case looked more like a museum display.
Somewhere I have some photos of a few shows I was still attending in the mid 1990's I'll see if I can dig them out and scan them for posting here.
"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
Edited by westcoin 08/16/2015 01:35 am
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Valued Member
United States
86 Posts |
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