...but there’s nothing like holding some in your hand, appreciating their history and imagining where they went! I haven’t done this in way too long.
Come on over to the ancients board, we do this every day! After being in the ground for 1800+ years... a few fingerprints are no problem. Geta Caracalla Elagabalus Severus Alexander Maximinus I Gordian III
Therefore I assume you to fill a Dansco for the less worthable coins.....the better ones stay in the slab. There is no need to grab them.
Indeed! Great coins and thank you for sharing. If anyone else wants to share their favorites in-hand here, please do. I did go the Dansco route but found myself cracking more slabs than I wanted to for the tougher types, so now I keep a raw capsule box for less expensive coins (sub $100) instead. I marvel the history of these daily, slabbed or not....it’s the holding part that I need to do more often. There’s something to be said for it that I don’t quite get handling plastic.
@CircCam , I could not agree with you, and with @Orange Julius more. There is nothing like the tactile feel of a coin directly in your hand. 95 % of my collection is plastic-free, and most of it will remain that way.
@CircCam, I noticed the Stephen Ambrose book in the photo; I just started that one a few weeks ago. I love his works. Got waylaid because a friend borrowed me the latest Lee Child and John Sanford books and I needed to get them back to him. Steve
Yes sir, John. There is sound reason to have coins certified and protected. But I completely connect with the history when I hold a coin in my hand. Been that way for me since my first.
Yes, he is good. I am really enjoying this one, it’s riveting and also surprisingly humorous at times (mostly due to Custer’s outlandish decision-making.)
Finished that one today, I highly recommend it. A well-crafted take on a very complicated chapter in our nation’s history that stays objective and acknowledges that there are generally both admirable and unfortunate individuals on any side of a large conflict. The digital version is currently viewable on Kindle with an Amazon Prime membership.
What blew me away in the beginning of the book were the parallels between Custer and Crazy Horse. My son and his family live in Custer, SD, with the Crazy Horse mountain carving just outside of town. Well worth a visit for anyone in the Black Hills. Steve
Agreed, I was fortunate to visit the Hills and see that. This was over ten years ago but as I recall at the time, they ran into some serious structural problems with Crazy Horse’s carving. Sure hope they are able to complete it as the setting is incredible as is the projected monument.
They've been proceeding, albeit slowly. They actually haven't blasted in five years, except for "show." They have been doing carving on Crazy Horse's head and his horse with pneumatic tools instead of dynamite. Mrs. Ziolkowski died a few years ago; I've seen their tombs (access open to the public only one day a year). The children are in charge now. Steve
My Antoninus Pius sestertius hanging out with his lookalikes from @Aethelred's collection. (Left, Antoninus Pius; Top: Hadrian; Bottom Marcus Aurelius) The Antoninus Pius is a relatively common coin but with very nice surfaces. The Hadrian sestertius (ex- Boston Museum of Fine Arts) also used to be mine.
I generally only buy them graded for authentication. They end up getting cracked out and stored in the much more appealing discs like those in the background. The exception would be attributed varieties.