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Tips For New Collecters Thread Please Leave A Post Please

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Forum Mom
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United States
5877 Posts
 Posted 05/23/2006  08:55 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Susanlynn9 to your friends list
I will agree with all that's been said so far and reiterate: Educate yourself before spending your money.

That said, please look at my reply in this thread:
https://goccf.com/t/5587
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United States
1031 Posts
 Posted 06/01/2006  3:38 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add docsfishn to your friends list
Any time I go to the bank and get cash I always ask for half of it in coin rolls. Search the rolls for coins I want to keep then spend or cash in the rest. The best part since I've been doing this is that I have to go to the bank twice as much which means more coins to search through.
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United States
1327 Posts
 Posted 06/01/2006  4:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add djluster to your friends list
I am not sure how much you get a week or month for coins. What I would do and I do as well when funds are low is. I do what docsfishn said I go to the bank and get a few rolls of coins. The best way I have found is most coin shop have coin folder for under 3.00. I know you like nickels so I would go buy a nickel folder. Then go to the bank and get a few nickel rolls. each roll is a 2.00 roll so it is not to much to get. then start filling your book, after you finish looking through those return them to the bank and get another roll and do it again. so for under 5.00 it could keep you busy for a long time. and remeber you can alway search pennys. .50 cents a roll like other have said don't be in to big of a hurry and waste money. if you do not have a coin shop near you were you can get a folder for cheap let me know.
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United States
1247 Posts
 Posted 06/01/2006  5:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add longnine009 to your friends list
Consider the possibility that Unc. coins may no longer be the ideal grades to collect. In the 50's and 60's there were few grades. Both Brown & Dunn and Photograde stopped at AU. Anything better than an AU was just Unc. So, an EF coin may have cost $1 in 1960 and that same coin in Unc. may have cost $2. It may well have made a lot of sense in those days to "buy the best." The best was only two times the XF grade.

But now there're 11 Unc or MS grades and the best might cost you one hundred or even one thousand times the XF price. They say these grades are necessary and that "change is good." Yes indeed, it is good. It good for whomever makes the change. That is in fact why changes are made at all.

But is there a law that says we can't change the way we approach someone else's change? If side "A" of the equation is changed on us, why can't we change side "B?"

I don't see anything wrong with circulated coins. They cost a fraction of what a high grade coin cost. The MS65 coin has no more history to offer over the EF. In fact it has less to offer since it never even got out of the house.

Quality is important, but only to a point. After which, like ALL THINGS UNCHECKED, it becomes an absurdity. Look at how people pay thousands of dollars more for an MS69 that is almost impossible to tell apart from an MS68. That, IMO, is not--as they like to quip--"smart money." But money that is so stupid it should be taken down to the river and drowned.
New Member
United States
40 Posts
 Posted 06/01/2006  7:02 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add hangokid11 to your friends list
thanks for the tips!
New Member
United States
17 Posts
 Posted 06/02/2006  8:49 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add kcvet67 to your friends list
SuperDave's post is excellent advice but I'd like to paraphrase just a little:

Don't buy what you don't like.

It may sound silly, but I've known dozens of people who started off enthusiastically only to lose interest because well-meaning "experts" convinced them to buy types that they didn't enjoy. The coins that I think are great may look ugly to you. If so don't buy them no matter what someone else tells you.

Learn patience. You don't have to have a complete set of something your first few years of collecting. There will always be another coin available next week or next month. Take the time to get examples of different coins and really LOOK at them. Sometimes even the tiny details can be interesting. Van Allen and Mallis didn't put together their book on silver dollar varieties overnight, it was the result of years of study. But it's not all studying, take the time to enjoy what you're collecting.

There are a lot of different coins out there, find the ones that YOU like the best and then begin to concentrate on those.

Best of luck.
Valued Member
United States
157 Posts
 Posted 06/02/2006  11:03 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Daniel J. Goevert to your friends list
My advice is to buy coins you like AND have good potential to appreciate handsomely in the future.

I can't begin to tell you about all the mistakes I made as a young collector. I bought all kinds of stuff. Yes, it was stuff I liked (e.g 1950-D Jefferson, dateless Buffalos, etc), but had no real potential. I wish now that I had pooled my coin fund money and focused on fewer coins, while zeroing in on proven collectibles that I liked, too.

I spent a lot on that dead-end stuff, when for the same money I could have actually owned a 1916 Standing Liberty quarter or 1856 FE cent. Sigh....
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Australia
1091 Posts
 Posted 06/02/2006  11:44 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add toast to your friends list
Get your parents involved. Parents are a valuable resource. They will like the idea of sharing a hobby with you and the fact that you are SAVING money instead of spending every last cent. Never spend your collecton and they will see that it a good way for you to save money and they WILL help you out.

When I was a kid, I had no allowance, chores were just part of life. But during a visit to the local supermarket, my brother and I saw in the drawer Morgan dollar coins. The shopkeeper gave us two as change. We ran home to my parents who gave us three more dollars and we ran back and got three more from the shopkeeper. Between my brother and I, we still own those Morgan dollar coins.

PS. As we got older we did get an allowance of 5 cents a week. But we could always check through our parents change and keep any old coin for our collection with permission. Times may have changed but people haven't. Parents will help you with your hobby.
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Australia
16836 Posts
 Posted 06/03/2006  03:05 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Sap to your friends list
As the old guys down at the coin club always say,

"First the book, then the coin."

You should buy as many reference books for the coins you're interested in as you can afford. But what about money to actually buy coins with? A good rule of thumb is, for every $2 you spend on coins in a certain series, you should be spending at least $1 on catalogues, books, magazines and other references relevant for that series.
Don't say "infinitely" when you mean "very"; otherwise, you'll have no word left when you want to talk about something really infinite. - C. S. Lewis
Rest in Peace
United States
3730 Posts
 Posted 06/03/2006  1:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Gary Burke to your friends list
Check your pocket change often. Good coins are still out there. Just check the "Interesting Coins Found In Circulation" thread.

There's nothing wrong with doing what a lot of us did in the "Old Days," and that was buy Whitman folders are start to collect coins of interest by date.

Collecting Lincoln cents, Jefferson nickels, the Statehood Quarters, and JFK's is boring to some people, but not to me. I have several completed collections, and when I find high quality, or older coins, I set them aside for kids and gradkids who hopefully will start to collect one day soon.
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United States
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 Posted 06/03/2006  3:19 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Buffaloboy5 to your friends list
Thanks for the tips guys I using half the ideas and tips you post like the books I have a 2006 black book, and 3 magazines and more to come, and a catalouge which I looking through
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United States
7123 Posts
 Posted 06/03/2006  3:47 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Metalman to your friends list
Hi Buffaloboy

If you can find a local coin club to join, where you can meet other collectors and have someone who can spend time with you ,help you see the difference in grades of the coins,get information about many different coins ,,see some of the coins that you have only seen in books up close !! maybe even go to the coin shops or like most coin clubs have a coin board where you can buy coins from other club members ,,

coin clubs are an excellent resource for the young collector!!



Rick
Edited by Metalman
06/03/2006 3:50 pm
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United States
7123 Posts
 Posted 06/03/2006  3:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Metalman to your friends list
One other thing,, when I was in school High School, there was a coin club at the school, all people my own age, I'm not sure if the schools still offer this type of thing, but it would be worth checking out when school starts up again,, If no club is already started and operating, perhaps the school would allow one to start? maybe there are more kids your own age who would become interested and you could start the coin club for your school ?

Rick
Edited by Metalman
06/03/2006 3:56 pm
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United States
604 Posts
 Posted 06/04/2006  1:39 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Buffaloboy5 to your friends list
Ok meatlman ill try that idea you have given me. But I'm not sure if anyone will jion since the don't value anything unless It is about sports like I do but I also value coins because of the history in it. I like sports I play football and basketball. You could call me a sports/coin person? thing?
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United States
604 Posts
 Posted 06/06/2006  5:24 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Buffaloboy5 to your friends list
Leave tips please
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