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Replies: 18 / Views: 5,642 |
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New Member
United States
7 Posts |
I'm just curious if you guys tend to mostly use folders or more of the album type options for organizing your coins?
Advantages or either over the other?
*** Moved by Staff to a more appropriate forum. ***
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Pillar of the Community
United States
8137 Posts |
I use albums because they offer better protection and you can see both sides of the coin.
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Bedrock of the Community
United States
20753 Posts |
 Since your new here you may not know this comes up a lot. Been discussed many times and almost always it's Album, not Folders. If you think about it a Folder is rather a ruining item for coins. Maybe not the Folder itself, but how they are used. I mean you push a coin into a slot and that usually means getting your finger prints all over the coins.
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Moderator
 United States
16679 Posts |
Dansco's for me :)
swcoin.ecrater.com
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1373 Posts |
I use both with my collection, and both have their positives and negatives.
Most of mine are folders, and if I need more storeroom I would buy folders first. They are much cheaper and take up a lot less space. The 'touching' doesn't make a difference; you have to touch coins whether you stick them in a folder or album. Most common coins have been touched by thousands of other people the hundred years before I got them. When putting 'new' or uncirculated coins in folders or albums I use the soft cotton gloves.
The one thing I don't like about my folders is that I have several different types, which just don't look 'right' on the shelf. I have both old and new style Whitmans (different sizes and shades of blue), and Whitman (decorated covers) and Littleton (green and taller)folders. At least my Canadian coins all have similar Whitman's.
What I don't like about my albums (all Littleton) is the shelf space taken and none have enough pages. Also, albums are WAY too expensive; both initially and for updates. Thankfully the ones I have were given to me at no added cost when I bought semi-complete coin sets.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
7375 Posts |
I use both also. Have no problem with old Whitman folders for low grade circulated sets. I say "old" folders so the paper and glue has most likely gassed itself out already. Just picked up a nice old used folder in good shape for a circulated Indian Head cent collection I'm starting. Also just bought a nice new old stock Dansco 7070 album.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1158 Posts |
Folders you can't see both sides and the coins are not well isolated from corrosion, etc.
ALbums look nicer and you can see both sides of the coins, but they are pricey.
I switched to just using coin album pages in a binder with cardboard coin flips. You can store 10 albums' worth of collections in a single large binder for about $30-40 worth of supplies. And you can see both sides of the coin and customize it how ever you want.
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Valued Member
United States
125 Posts |
I use both. I start with folders and move into albums when I get near the end of a collection and go for the rarer dates. The albums are nicer but not every set is album worthy from the start in my opinion.
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Moderator
 United States
189767 Posts |
I started with folders when I was a kid, but that changed after my Grandfather bought two Dansco albums for me. I have been using them ever since (thirty years this Christmas).
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Valued Member
Canada
56 Posts |
I am moving to whitman folders to whitman. I am also buying some whitman albums for my type set and Roosevelt dimes, but I like littleton folders more than whitman
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Valued Member
United States
186 Posts |
At the Whitman Coin Expo recently, I purchased five used Whitman Albums for just $1 per page, and given that wasn't much more expensive than the price of a new folder, am not disappointed. I selected Buffalo nickels, 1946-1970 Roosevelt dimes (complete for the 1946-1964 silver era), Washington quarters 1932-1964, Walking halves 1916-40 and 1941-1947, and Franklin halves (complete). Of course as others mentioned, both sides of the coin and better protection make albums ideal for all but upper end mint state and AU+ keys. For a folder, while I haven't had any oxidation or paper issues with all of my folders since I acquired them 10-15 years ago for about a buck a piece at an LCS, I do notice that on XF or better coins, the luster on the reverse can fade over time due to being exposed to the dark slots. Of course for the thousand-dollar plus coins, slabbing is preferred.
Edited by yelimsexa 11/12/2015 1:17 pm
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Moderator
 United States
189767 Posts |
Sounds like a great deal. 
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Pillar of the Community
United States
3244 Posts |
World Premier coin slabs for me. I know in the long run a more expensive option but I like being able to grab a coin to inspect it and I can do that easily with these. Plus I have an awesome place to store them all so that's what works for me. If I was chosing between the two options you listed it would be album and not folder....
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1911 Posts |
Dansco albums, for the win here! Look amazing, great quality, just need to make some holds on the side for the slides so I don't get fingerprints on the slides where the coins are O.o
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Pillar of the Community
United States
500 Posts |
Well I use folders for extra sets of inexpensive coins, or State Quarter - ATB sets etc. But always albums for older sets or things like 90% silver State Quarters - ATB's. It depends on what the "value" is. State Quarter "sets" hardly have a premium much over face value or Jefferson nickels, small cents from the 50's forward etc. Most of those types of circulated sets I have put in inexpensive folders. Everything else is in albums. Mostly Dansco but I do have a couple of Littletons albums as well.
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Valued Member
United States
136 Posts |
I have had recurring issues when using Whitman albums with coins slipping down between the parts of the page, lots of fun getting them back out, then they do it again. Never had that with Dansco or Littleton.
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Replies: 18 / Views: 5,642 |