chowdersilver said:
Nabullion Dynamite said:
I've just begun throwing a few copper rounds with my silver orders a month or so ago. I mainly buy the ones that are replicas of old us currency like liberty cap, draped bust, capped bust so that my kids can actually see a detailed picture of what the coins used to look like. 200 years of circulation has distorted the image on some just a little bit
However I don't like the way copper tarnishes, get real ugly fast.
So if you put them in an air-tite (I know, the air-tite is about the cost of the coin), would it prevent it from tarnishing? Right now, I think they are stunning, and go very well next to the actual silver currency they replicate.
I also agree with the poster that indicated his kids like copper rounds just as much as the silver ones. I ordered my kids some copper Christmas coins (snowman and reindeer) for their stockings. I probably wouldn't buy silver Christmas rounds (too expensive) as nobody at our LCS wants to buy them. However, I think I paid like $6 for all 4 rounds and think in an air-tight will still be a link to a great memory.
Again, given solar is finding alternatives and/or reducing the amount per panel of silver, I am not sure what will ever drive the prices. I don't see silver used as money again in the United States.
Yes, the kids get the copper in airtires, and the grand kids (age 6 and under) get one in, one out.
This is one of those potential sleepers for collectors.
The relatively high markup on collector stuff is very often what was cheap or free when it was manufactured.
Have a cigar box full of crackerjack toys, could be worth hundreds $$$.
Penny postcards, I sold several with an average price of $50. I rescued them from my parent's basement.
Depression glassware, free in boxes of soap, sold by the boxful for a few dollars in the 50's, was bringing $50+ for the key pieces in the 80's. Lots of counterfeit stuff, you have to know what you are buying. So collectable that people started counterfeiting it.
Wallace Nutting prints, colorized black and white photographs, sold door to door for a few dollars during the depression. In the 50's a box full of framed prints were a few dollars. they were selling the cheap frames, the prints were included at no cost. I wanted to buy some in the 80's, couldn't find anything under $75, nice stuff was over twice that.
No guarantee on the coppers, but I'll spend a few hundred.
Collectables are about memories. Real, cash value, is secondary.