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Replies: 24 / Views: 3,773 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
6370 Posts |
I would do a nice type set. You get some of everything; it reflects the entire history of the United States; and there are no pesky key dates that will set you back, just rare types. If anything, it is a great investment and adds great cariety to your portfolio. Lastly, the freedom associated with a type set is astounding. You can set your own rules and include/exclude any coins you want without compromising the integrity of the set.
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Valued Member
United States
301 Posts |
I personally have always liked older coins, so I would suggest a silver 3 cent set, or 2 cent set. The silver 3 cent set is a little salty in the later dates above vg grade, and the 2 cent has only the 1872, 1873 proof that are costly. Again, all depends on the budget and you can always do the Indian cent or Buffalo nickel for less. Good luck with whatever you choose!
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Bedrock of the Community
Australia
21788 Posts |
I completed a type set of Australian pre decimal coins decades ago, where each type was represented by the rarest date, except for the '30 penny; that was represented by a '25. Where to next? I decided to collect in an area that was impossible to complete a set: World coins ancient to modern, from the invention of coinage c/- 600 BC, to today. There can be no limit to your numismatic horizons, but you get to accumulate a lot of numismatic knowledge along the way. CCF benefit: you are able to post in most forms within the CCF. Helps to explain my relatively high post count in four years. I will most probably die before THIS set is complete!  Oh! I do have about 200 American coins in the collection.
Edited by sel_69l 04/20/2014 8:54 pm
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Valued Member
United States
179 Posts |
There are SO many coins out there. You CAN'T collect them all. I'm going to give you some strange choices. 1. Hard Times Tokens. 2. Indian Head cents. 3. Large Cents. 4. Barber quarters. 5. (if you're brave). Colonials
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Valued Member
United States
131 Posts |
I'd go with the Quarters in high end grades. That being said, Walkers are probably my favorite design, but I'm the type of person that I have to finish a collection or it bugs me. Walkers will be tougher to find in high grades, and more expensive. If I had a serious income, and could devote the kind of resources necessary, I'd do Walkers. Otherwise, the Quarters are more reasonable, and while there are a few expensive ones, you have a bunch to get, so you can get a fix for your coin jones without blowing a whole lot of money.
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Valued Member
United States
89 Posts |
I agree with muddler about adding the Franklin Proofs. You have to be careful on the 1956 though. There are actually 2 types and a big difference in price. Example: 1956 Type 1, PR67 - Average price $350. 1956 Type 2 PR68 - Average price $129. You get a higher grade for the Type 2 at less that half price. I've included a pic showing the difference. 
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
Quote: World coins ancient to modern, from the invention of coinage c/- 600 BC, to today. There can be no limit to your numismatic horizons, but you get to accumulate a lot of numismatic knowledge along the way.
An interesting point of view about what your suggesting is the amount of conversations you could end up having with other collectors about some of those. Try that with Roosevelt dimes for example. You mention the head of a dead person and that's about it. Go to a coin show where there are really old coins and you could get into a coversation for hours about some of them.
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Valued Member
United States
144 Posts |
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Valued Member
United States
269 Posts |
I've been pulling all the current moderns out of circulation with a few major purchases to fill the tough holes. I've completed my Jeffersons, and Roosevelts, and only need the sVDB and 14D for the lincolns. I'm diving into the Washington's now, while still looking to purchase the proof only S mints for the cents, nickels, and dimes. I've got all the clad Washington P&D, and all but two states and a few ATB's. I've started buying UNC silver Washingtons from 1954 - 1964 for now, and will start going back when those are done. But I tell you, the set I really want to complete some day is the 'V' nickel. Only a couple or really rare dates, so you can get a mostly complete set in whatever grade you decide for a pretty consistent price per coin. And, they are SO MUCH PRETTIER then that UGLY Buffalo nickel!!
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Replies: 24 / Views: 3,773 |