Author |
Replies: 19 / Views: 1,809 |
Valued Member
United States
409 Posts |
Hello,
I'm been struggling lately with trying to enjoy my collection because what I wanted to do did not work out. My plan was to create a gallery of pictures of my coins on my website to share. I can't take pictures of coins, that's just a proven fact and it isn't worth the stress and ridiculous amount of time it would take to do that. I tried looking online for pictures and then citing the sources of those pictures but that didn't go very well.
My next thought was to write in my blog about my coins and share it without pictures, but what do I write about? Do people (rather it be someone visiting my blog or fellow coin collectors) care about a bunch of facts they can look up on their own? I enjoy researching and putting things together though. Will my thoughts, opinions, stories, and experiences be enough for a decent blog post?
I come here because this is a VERY supportive environment and I have always received a lot of great support and advice on many levels. I'm sure I'm way over thinking this, but, that's what I do with almost EVERYTHING!
Thanks, Rich
|
|
Valued Member
United States
157 Posts |
Quote: Do people (rather it be someone visiting my blog or fellow coin collectors) care about a bunch of facts they can look up on their own? Yes, if you have a coherent story to tell, or you merge a number of disparate sources together into a single resource. Quote: Will my thoughts, opinions, stories, and experiences be enough for a decent blog post? Only one way to know. Might be helpful to know about the theme of your collection. A bunch of random shiny things is silly to write or read about IMO, but I'd be all in if you're talking about the coins of German East Africa, or 19th century Newfoundland issues, or the Charlotte mint, etc.
|
Valued Member
United Kingdom
347 Posts |
So which of your coins are your favourites, and why? Who were the engravers and when did they live, for instance. Which section of your collection intrigues you most and why? The answers you come up with are bound to inspire somebody else, and might even lead you into what could be an exciting avenue of research that you never thought might be interesting. Sharing the ideas will start conversations and everybody will be better off as a result. I hope this helps. Above all, have fun!
|
Moderator
 United States
164276 Posts |
I am sorry to see you are struggling.  I am not sure what to say, except that I still enjoy looking at my coins all on my own and I hope you can do so as well. 
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
1869 Posts |
People collect many things, coins, salt shakers, dolls, antiques, whatever. For some it's a casual pleasure but not a huge part of their lives. Others are more serious, more involved, dedicate more time to their hobby, keep documents, take photos, post info, go to estate sales, auctions, coin shows, etc.
I like to take photos of my coins/bullion, mostly just use my cell phone, not the best pics but works for keeping a photos folder of them. Sometimes I take better pics with a macro camera to post online. There's numerous photo editing apps available, some come preinstalled on computers, phones. It takes some time to learn how to use the apps, edit photos.
It's up to you. If it's more of a chore for you to take pics or try writing a blog, share your coins, then that's not fun. If you wouldn't enjoy it then don't do it, nothing wrong with you just enjoying your coins on your own. My wife and daughter don't care at all about coins, so lucky me they are all mine LOL.
Edited by livingwater 03/05/2024 5:26 pm
|
Bedrock of the Community
 United States
94367 Posts |
One shouldn't struggle to enjoy one's collection.
|
Valued Member
Portugal
478 Posts |
Sharing is part of the enjoyment. Having most of a collection locked I a vault, I put much time into photographing the coins for my own enjoyment. I think I understand what you are saying.
Sometimes researching an unknown coin is even more enjoyable than acquiring it. And then there is a tale to tell.
Or you can try medals instead of coins. Each is more unique and they are usually well preserved all. It matters less if you use another photo of the same medal. I am planning on telling some stories about medals here. If I can acquire the one I am after :) But would be able to tell it with having and photographing that medal. It will be new information here because no one discussed that medal here yet.
I advise that you go back to your original problem, the photos. Telephone photos suck. HDR sucks. If you want really great photos you need a frame to fix the camera, good lenses, manual focus. Without it you will spend much time looking for the right focus each time you photograph a coin. Frustrating. You will trade material for time and need much patience. Autofocus with macro on cheap cameras is terrible. Old and now cheap early pro or enthusiast cameras and macro lenses will do fine. Lenses are harder to find cheap. You only need macro lenses for near and very large photos. So you can use one with a regular lens and set it up further from the coin. Good for lighting too.
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
4233 Posts |
I'm not sure if you're struggling with enjoying your collection yourself, or struggling with how to get someone else to enjoy it? Maybe both? I had a perhaps similar experience recently. Made a very minor new discovery about Barber half dollar transition types, wondered how this happened only at the New Orleans mint, started digging into mint records on NNP, found that the anomaly likely originated with a specific die shipment, documented all the die pairs using those dies, etc. I really enjoyed going down the rabbit hole. Then I wrote it all up. Let it sit for a few days, read it again. Gosh, it's ten pages long. Is this more boring than watching paint dry on the internet? The first thought of half the people out there is "how much is it worth?", and nobody cares about the minutia of what was going on at the New Orleans mint in December 1900. I struggled to get over that feeling. I guess like classic_coin said, you'll never know unless you try it and see. Maybe you could solve part of your problem by finding a pro to take the pictures for you. I'm not sure if writing about your own collection and then using pictures of someone else's coins is a good way to go. If you end up doing something, post a link so we can check it out!
|
Pillar of the Community
United States
7057 Posts |
If you struggle to enjoy your collection it's probably time to sell It or put it in storage or revisit it.
If you want to share it, that's not really an enjoyment issue.
I think you have to enjoy it before you start sharing it, but take into consideration that most people care about what it looks like what it costs what it's worth. I'm not one that cares about minutia for the most part. But I do like to share on here, but I also understand that not many are interested in what I like.
|
Pillar of the Community
Canada
5045 Posts |
Well, if you feel that you can't take good enough pictures, perhaps you could find someone to take them for you?
|
Valued Member
 United States
409 Posts |
Hello, Thank you so much for the replies, a lot of good advice and insight here as always. Quote: I'm not sure if you're struggling with enjoying your collection yourself, or struggling with how to get someone else to enjoy it? Maybe both? There is a lot of truth to this statement. I think sharing my collection should be something I do here with people who also like coins rather then "out there" where most people could care less about coins. Quote: If you want to share it, that's not really an enjoyment issue. I think I need to go back to basics here. Why did I want to collect coins in the first place? So, I could have something to pass down to my son. I don't collect anything rare or valuable and my son could care less about coins. I have learned a lot, both good and bad. Taking pictures of coins is just one small area of the hobby. I used to subscribe to Coin World magazine and would get a lot of good information from there, perhaps it is time to revisit that. I wrote something about my 1979 Proof set, took my time and had fun doing it. http://goccf.com/t/461009Maybe this is how I can share my collection and experiences. Rich
|
Bedrock of the Community
United States
10992 Posts |
Why not start a facebook or instagram account for your coin collection? That keeps a chronological record of whatever you want to share about the collection that you can refer back to. It also shares the collection with interested parties through an algorithm that measures interest. The picture quality is something that you can work on at your own pace as it suits you. If you work on it, it should improve over time.
|
Valued Member
United Kingdom
347 Posts |
I've just read kbbpll's post. Couldn't agree more. This forum is the place to be because it's guaranteed that someone here will be interested in the research-rabbitholes we all go down from time to time. Makes me happy to know it.
|
Valued Member
United States
326 Posts |
I'll just throw this out there; when one realizes that their hobby or collection is no longer of interest, not fun, becomes mental work/anguish/festering, etc, it's time to set it aside, forget about it, and then see if you come back to it with enthusiasm or a realization that you are done with it. If the latter, then developing an exit strategy is prudent as you do not want to leave your interests and dreams to someone else who may have no interest to figure it out.
Edited by Hunter611 04/10/2024 9:01 pm
|
Moderator
 United States
164276 Posts |
Well said, Hunter. 
|
Bedrock of the Community
 United States
94367 Posts |
|
|
Replies: 19 / Views: 1,809 |