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What To Collect...

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Turbolag's Avatar
United States
127 Posts
 Posted 10/29/2015  4:31 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Turbolag to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Cool, pretty much what I just decided on too!

Gonna try to complete a walker set while also keeping an eye out for Franklin halves, Peace dollars, and mercury and rosie dimes. All the research/focus will be on walkers but if I go to a place and they dont have any, I'm just gonna buy $1 face bags of the others to bulk up on silver and common dates
Pillar of the Community
United States
1450 Posts
 Posted 10/29/2015  5:05 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add terry8835 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Yes, I went today to a coin shop to try and buy a 1919D or 1919S SLQ. I ended up buying three Peace dollars instead. I already have a set of Peace dollars but I bought better coins including a 1922D in MS condition. You can always improve an existing set when you have the cash and opportunity. I say when you have the opportunity to buy a good coin take it because if you wait an hour it could be long gone. The money I spend on coins is mad money. I don't skip the car payment to buy a coin. It is great that you have decided to collect at a young age because if you collect in a serious and consistent way I bet you will have something valuable and vey cool 20-23 years from now.
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Numisma's Avatar
United States
4963 Posts
 Posted 10/29/2015  6:51 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numisma to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I think Walkers are a good way to go. Only one date in the series (1921-D) would set you back much. In fact, I might do them myself, then maybe Franklins.
Valued Member
baldy's Avatar
United States
83 Posts
 Posted 10/29/2015  11:51 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add baldy to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I'm 17 too, and I am working on Mercs and Liberty nickels. There is obviously the 16-D but other than that, they are fairly affordable (except for a few semi-keys in better grades.) As far as the V nickels, you can get the Big Three (85,86,12-S) for around $100 each in low grades, and none of the rest are over $100 each up to VF-XF.
Valued Member
United States
467 Posts
 Posted 10/30/2015  03:57 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add oober to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
First set I built was just a type set of the different coinage through out US history, something like the 20th century set folders that are out there, but went back to 1800 instead. It was fun and made it how I wanted to within the budget I could afford.

ex Capped Bust, Seated Liberty, Barber, Mercury, Roosevelt for the dimes. You can get a very nice sample of each for not too much money. Now you could make it even more thorough if you follow the Red Book and get a sample of each of the major varieties listed. I did this for all of the denominations. Still working on the dollars though.

Just collect what you want. Always the key.
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Numisma's Avatar
United States
4963 Posts
 Posted 10/30/2015  08:25 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numisma to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
That's also my first album, the Dansco 7070. I'm nearly done, but most of the coins aren't too nice.
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crazyglue's Avatar
United States
467 Posts
 Posted 10/30/2015  09:54 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add crazyglue to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I found the half dollars the most fun and easiest to build a series (several albums in a row) at lower costs...Barber, Liberty Walking, Franklin and Kennedy.
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United States
1450 Posts
 Posted 10/30/2015  12:12 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add terry8835 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Franklins don't get much respect unless they are in BU condition. These coins are 70% silver and are easy to collect in MS condition. The Kennedy non-silver coins don't interest me. Barber halfs are interesting as are all large silver coins. Unless the mint were to come to its senses and start minting common coins in silver again we will never see the like again. If Ike dollars were silver like their earlier cousins they would be highly collectable, but making them copper clad and just silver clad put that coin in front of the firing squad. It is not a bad coin. My brother has a set in BU and Proof condition and they are impressive looking, but mostly worthless.
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Numisma's Avatar
United States
4963 Posts
 Posted 10/30/2015  3:59 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numisma to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Franklins are 900 fine, not 700.
Pillar of the Community
United States
1450 Posts
 Posted 10/30/2015  5:54 pm  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add terry8835 to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
Numisma

My mistake on the Franklins. I must have been thinking "Sterling" because I buy sterling silver at auctions sometimes. Yes, Franklins are 90% silver. If you get them all in BU condition they look great. Same with the Ike dollars. You get them all in MS65 or Proof and they look good in a Dansco album set. Some are actually valuable. Why did the mint stop making them? Canada and UK have dollar-like coins that are much cheaper to make, and last much longer than paper.
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Numisma's Avatar
United States
4963 Posts
 Posted 10/31/2015  02:29 am  Show Profile   Bookmark this reply Add Numisma to your friends list Get a Link to this Reply
I also like half dollars in general- Franklins are not my favorite, but nonetheless I appreciate them even in circulated grades. I personally like Walking, Seated and Capped Bust halves. Ikes are nice as well, although the design can't compare with many coins by Adolph Weinman & Augustus St. Gaudens.
By the say, sterling is 925 fine rather than 700.
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