I'm curious - I'm certain many of you would have seen @sonlarson work or my work at issuu by now. Just in case you haven't seen them or you don't know what I am talking about, here are a couple of links: https://issuu.com/gxseries https://issuu.com/mikelarson2 My personal favorite is the Japan type set album which took a lot of planning and frustration. Mike's Ireland album is also very nice. The choices are literally infinite - you can do a type set album of various denomination or just a single denomination of all years / mintmarks or something more unique such as aluminum coins around the world, one coin from each country etc. The biggest question is, what would you be happy to pay if you can customize anything that you really want? What are some albums that you would want to see?
Sakata - these so called "digital" coin albums do not exist in physical form. While the photos of the coins are from genuine coins, these are photoshopped so that they appear to be in a coin album.
Okay, thanks. I don't think I would be willing to pay anything so I cannot vote and am not allowed to see other people's votes. It needs an option of 0. What are the units, by the way? Dollars, cents, euros, bitcoins? As it is digital I guess it is bitcoin.
it is a very interesting way of seeing complete sets of coins. 2 thumbs up. not sure what it would cost have it done. coin photography is expensive if done on a professional level.
That being the case, acceptable to me would be to receive the album and $40. Then I would just ignore the "virtual" album & spend the $40 on a "real" coin.
I like these, and might use them depending... - My collection changes all the time. When you say "... customize anything that you want", do you mean I could add a slot for "France 1929 Turin, silver" once I get that coin? Or is the album made once, "custom", and then made again when I get the coin? - I was not able to bring up large/huge images of your coins. A full-screen display of the digital page still has the coins fairly small. Is there a larger view of a single coin? Thanks Dave
I can't even begin to imagine why anybody would actually pay anything for something like that. I mean there are literally dozens of websites that are completely free that allow coin collectors to organize, display, and manage their coin collections. So why would anybody pay for it ? Just because you can make it look like it's in an album ? I mean there might be a bit of the "cool factor" to it for some folks to use it but would that be enough to make them pay for it ?
I'm afraid I'm another one for the zero option. I find the albums shown mildly interesting but I can't say I would want to look at them more than once and so would not view them at all if I had to pay. As others have said, if I am looking for images or info on particular coins there are plenty of free options on the web. I'm sorry if that is disappointing to those who have clearly spent quite a lot of time putting the albums together, but I would rather save my money for real coins in my own collection.
Perhaps a collector could print his "album" and cut out the picture to place in a binder as a want list. When the coin is found the picture is thrown away. I would buy a complete photo album of every axis coin issue plus every coin they issued in occupied nations. I would want the coins to appear actual size in full color and would be willing to pay $100 for it IF AND ONLY IF for that money I got reprint rights for publication. Send me a pm if you can supply that. I would pay even more if you added the same thing for America's enemy nations in World War One.
It's the start of an interesting idea, but I can't see it being a viable commercial thing in its present form. What I would be interested in is a program that allows you to store images of a coin that you actually possess and then displays it on demand as a 360-degree rotating image, with stop-motion and enlargement options for detailed visual inspection. The actual coin would be safely put away in protective custody and would not need to be physically handled otherwise. Anybody out there interested in designing an imaging gadget that you could drop the coin in and it generates a full-3D image for this purpose?