Rob Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 Perhaps it was the way I started the thread, but every now seems to collect Halfpennies. LOL. Does anyone collect Florins or Half-crowns. Are there any dedicated silver Threepence collectors?If you were to put money on it outside copper and bronze what would you say is the most collected denomination?MarkShillings or hammeredI'd say halfcrowns, crowns, sovereigns, shillings. In that order.I concur Quote
sound Posted September 12, 2014 Author Posted September 12, 2014 Perhaps it was the way I started the thread, but every now seems to collect Halfpennies. LOL. Does anyone collect Florins or Half-crowns. Are there any dedicated silver Threepence collectors?If you were to put money on it outside copper and bronze what would you say is the most collected denomination?MarkShillings or hammeredI'd say halfcrowns, crowns, sovereigns, shillings. In that order.I concurInteresting that Florins do not get a mention. Arguably, with the gothic obverse and Britannia standing, albeit in different periods, you have the most attractive of all coins?Mark Quote
Rob Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 That's probably because gothic florins are virtually impossible to get in mint state. Bag marks and a low rim don't help. Quote
Gary1000 Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 I collect Farthing to Crown 1900 to 1967 so I guess I collect Half Pennies. Quote
Peckris Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 Back to halfpennies ... the 1806 is by far the commonest denomination of that date, but do you think I can find a decent one to go with my penny and farthing? Not on your Nelly. Quote
DaveG38 Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 I think the answer lies in the fact its in the middle. farthings are easy to get in higher grade cheaply, and plenty around, penny is the penny, and what most people probably have many of at the start of collections.halfpennies are the thing between the 2.Not only that, but when I was a kid in the dying days of LSD (not THAT LSD), pretty much all halfpennies in change were George II and Elizabeth II. There were very few decent George V and practically no Edward VII or Victoria, when compared to say Pennies. Even now, decent quality halfpennies are not as common as other denominations, nor are they as collected. Not too long ago, I picked up a job lot of EF-UNC Edward VII halfpennies for £140 plus commission, and that included a GEF Low Tide variety. In one single purchase, I upgraded every one of my Edwards without much outlay. Why nobody else wanted to buy this lot in the auction, I've no idea, but similar lots of pennies were going well over the price I paid, so I guess unpopularity explains it. 1 Quote
Nick Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 But it seems that there is no denomination so unloved as the sixpence. Quote
scott Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 (edited) sixpences? not really heard of there being any more or less then shillingspart of me expects there to be a show your halfpenny thread appearing :/ Edited September 12, 2014 by scott Quote
sound Posted September 12, 2014 Author Posted September 12, 2014 But it seems that there is no denomination so unloved as the sixpence. I think that is true unless you throw in silver threepence. Yet I can't be the only one with a nostalgic view of sixpence's. My mum used to count them out when me and my brother went to the Saturday morning flics. "Sixpence for the bus, sixpence to get in and sixpence to spend.Boy we were hard up. Now I can afford it I should buy a few. LOL.Mark Quote
Michael-Roo Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 But it seems that there is no denomination so unloved as the sixpence. I think that is true unless you throw in silver threepence.Yet I can't be the only one with a nostalgic view of sixpence's. My mum used to count them out when me and my brother went to the Saturday morning flics. "Sixpence for the bus, sixpence to get in and sixpence to spend.Boy we were hard up. Now I can afford it I should buy a few. LOL.MarkAbsolutely! The silver threepenny bit must surely rate as the most unloved coin of all. Quote
Rob Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 (edited) Proofs and patterns. OK, it isn't a denomination but I think you will struggle to find many people collecting them, yet it isn't as if they are unaffordable for the most part as many can be purchased for a few hundred up to a few thousand which is similar to sovereigns. The penny boys throw a lot more cash than this at their coins. Edited September 12, 2014 by Rob Quote
Peckris Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 Proofs and patterns. OK, it isn't a denomination but I think you will struggle to find many people collecting them, yet it isn't as if they are unaffordable for the most part as many can be purchased for a few hundred up to a few thousand which is similar to sovereigns. The penny boys throw a lot more cash than this at their coins.LMAO Quote
bronze mad Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 Perhaps it was the way I started the thread, but every now seems to collect Halfpennies. LOL. Does anyone collect Florins or Half-crowns. Are there any dedicated silver Threepence collectors?If you were to put money on it outside copper and bronze what would you say is the most collected denomination?MarkI love the 3d i think it was the first silver coin that I had in my early collecting days and it was 1917, it was probably fair, and even now nearly 40 yrs later the one i got now is probably Fine! but thats just the way it goes. 1 Quote
jaggy Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 But it seems that there is no denomination so unloved as the sixpence. I am, primarily, a collector of sixpences. It all stems from those childhood days when 6d got you into the ABC Minors and 6d also got you a load of sweets to guzzle.It is a very interesting denomination going back to Henry VIII with a wide range of varieties, patterns, errors, etc. and with more than a fair share of rarities. 1 Quote
Rob Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 The ultimate unpopular denomination/series? The BoE tokens? I've always seen these as unattractive to collectors for the same reason that the Channel Islands coins are ignored. The design is very simple and replicated throughout the series leading to an aestheically bland collection. Quote
DaveG38 Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 Perhaps it was the way I started the thread, but every now seems to collect Halfpennies. LOL. Does anyone collect Florins or Half-crowns. Are there any dedicated silver Threepence collectors?If you were to put money on it outside copper and bronze what would you say is the most collected denomination?MarkI love the 3d i think it was the first silver coin that I had in my early collecting days and it was 1917, it was probably fair, and even now nearly 40 yrs later the one i got now is probably Fine! but thats just the way it goes.The trouble with the threepence is the tedious designs it displays. Leave aside the brass ones for a moment and look at the silver and its fundamentally unchanged right back to 1689. Prior to that, you do get a Roman III in James II's reign and interlinked Cs, with Charles II, but apart from that it's all crowned '3's all the way. Not much real design innovation at all. Quote
DaveG38 Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 The ultimate unpopular denomination/series? The BoE tokens? I've always seen these as unattractive to collectors for the same reason that the Channel Islands coins are ignored. The design is very simple and replicated throughout the series leading to an aestheically bland collection.I'd still like a 1816 three shillings to complete the set!! Quote
Rob Posted September 12, 2014 Posted September 12, 2014 The ultimate unpopular denomination/series? The BoE tokens? I've always seen these as unattractive to collectors for the same reason that the Channel Islands coins are ignored. The design is very simple and replicated throughout the series leading to an aestheically bland collection.I'd still like a 1816 three shillings to complete the set!!A few have gone through auctions in the last 10 years, though none of these appeared to be unc despite the catalogues saying they were. Any genuine unc is likely to be worth the money spent. NGC pop reports suggest they have slabbed 1 at 64 and 2 at 65, though what grade they are or whether still slabbed is anyone's guess. Hope springs eternal. Quote
DaveG38 Posted September 13, 2014 Posted September 13, 2014 The ultimate unpopular denomination/series? The BoE tokens? I've always seen these as unattractive to collectors for the same reason that the Channel Islands coins are ignored. The design is very simple and replicated throughout the series leading to an aestheically bland collection.I'd still like a 1816 three shillings to complete the set!!A few have gone through auctions in the last 10 years, though none of these appeared to be unc despite the catalogues saying they were. Any genuine unc is likely to be worth the money spent. NGC pop reports suggest they have slabbed 1 at 64 and 2 at 65, though what grade they are or whether still slabbed is anyone's guess. Hope springs eternal. I've seen one or two GVF or so ones, which would be acceptable, but the prices are still very high for what is as you say a thoroughly unattractive coin. Quote
Peckris Posted September 13, 2014 Posted September 13, 2014 But it seems that there is no denomination so unloved as the sixpence. I am, primarily, a collector of sixpences. It all stems from those childhood days when 6d got you into the ABC Minors and 6d also got you a load of sweets to guzzle.It is a very interesting denomination going back to Henry VIII with a wide range of varieties, patterns, errors, etc. and with more than a fair share of rarities.I'm with you there. I think the sixpence is not only a great little denomination, but it was fiercely loved by the GBP prior to decimalisation which is why it got a 10-year stay of execution. I do think the reverse from 1831-1910 is rather bland, but before and after that it was a miniature triumph of the designer's art. Having said that, the 1937-1948 reverse is rather lamentable, but not as bad as the quite awful florin, or the Scottish-lion-having-a-crap design on the shillings. Quote
AardHawk Posted September 13, 2014 Posted September 13, 2014 Pre 2009 decimals for me. Loads of interesting varieties to search out. An inexpensive and pleasurable hobby. Anyone who can rationalize spending thousands of pounds on a coin needs to visit a nut doctor. Quote
Peckris Posted September 13, 2014 Posted September 13, 2014 Anyone who can rationalize spending thousands of pounds on a coin needs to visit a nut doctor. I'd agree with you on my own behalf, but if someone is rich as Croesus and can justify indulging his hobby, I guess £000's are just a sneeze to him. Quote
Rob Posted September 13, 2014 Posted September 13, 2014 Yes, it's each to their own. Personally I would sooner have a coin than a flashy car, but for others a car is more desirable. Some people spend thousands on a holiday. The market in used holidays is quite stagnant at present - at least a collection is something you can resell. 1 Quote
sound Posted September 13, 2014 Author Posted September 13, 2014 Pre 2009 decimals for me. Loads of interesting varieties to search out. An inexpensive and pleasurable hobby. Anyone who can rationalize spending thousands of pounds on a coin needs to visit a nut doctor.And of course anyone buying high grade over the last ten years, selectively, will have done very nicely as an investment. Just look at how prices have increased. Some of these 'nut doctor patients' are laughing all the way to the bank. LOL.Mark Quote
jaggy Posted September 13, 2014 Posted September 13, 2014 Pre 2009 decimals for me. Loads of interesting varieties to search out. An inexpensive and pleasurable hobby. Anyone who can rationalize spending thousands of pounds on a coin needs to visit a nut doctor. From time to time I revalue my coins for insurance purposes. I also compare market/retail value to cost. Needless to say - and quite apart from the pleasure I get in them - my coin collection is far from my worst investment. 1 Quote
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