August 9, 2015

More on Sets: Part Three. Relics.

Adding battered and corroded coins to your collection will open up new avenues of exploration. This is the easiest way to put some necromancer principles into action.
Collection #1.   Nice CN cents of the Civil War era.
   Relic coins stimulate the imagination. How was it lost? Who lost it? Where was it found? We cannot answer these questions to our satisfaction, but we can ponder them. What better way to do so then to collect a few relics and create your own interpretation of how they could have been lost.
   We already do this. For example, many collectors imagine that their 1886 Morgan dollar could have been in a poker game in a smokey saloon, or that President Lincoln might have spent the 1860 "nick" that sits on your desk.
   But a lost coin that sat in the ground for decades or more, a lost coin marked with the corrosive badge of authority, is more evocative.
   A shiny cartwheel or mellow Indian cent brings little to the table but for the collector's bravado. We have heard it all before: "Look at what I got," and "It is VF super-plus," and "I paid less than what it is worth!" It that it? It this what the coins are telling you? Well, let's bring out the awards for Mr. Sharp Coin Buyer (Trumpets sounding).

Collection #2.   Relics from the Civil War era.
Maurice Rheims noted in his book, The Strange Life of Objects, that: "One of a collector's most entrancing daydreams is the imaginary joy of uncovering the past in the guise of an archaeologist." The necromancer collector whole-heartedly agrees. And to go further I would add: "Even the seemingly insignificant piece has the power to evoke grand images of the past." And furthermore: "Especially the seemingly insignificant piece!"
    So consider the following two collections: 1) a neat and tidy set of copper nickel cents from the American Civil War, all selected for their pleasant tone and moderate wear; or 2) a few beaten copper nickel cents, plus some larger coppers, all juxtaposed with a few relics dug from skirmish sites. Which collecting is the most exciting?
  

August 2, 2015

More on Set Collecting: Off the Grid

Collecting is about forming sets.
   In a previous posting, I challenged readers to consider breaking out of the mold set forth by coin folders and collecting guidebooks. The necromancer collector is all about collecting "off" the  book. Admittedly, collecting without a folder, moving beyond a series if you will, can be scary!
   Oh, I'm not scared. That's what you say.
   But why are you grasping the handrail so tightly?
A peek into a cash box secreted
away during the Civil War.
A collection?
   Consider this: Some scholars -- maybe philosophers is more apt -- have described the collecting process as ART. The collector creates something unique. No two collections are alike. Within each collection, objects are arranged to tell a story.
   What story? I knew you would ask this.
   Two stories actually. First, the collection is a representation of history or memory or fantasy (usually all three) that has personal meaning to the collector. A Civil War buff might focus on series that circulated during the 1860s: copper nickel cents, CW tokens, and silver trimes.
   Second, the collection reflects a timeline of the collecting process itself. As each coin is added to the set, the collector has discovered something new and added it to the collection. The best years of our lives are marked by a series of acquisitions. Also, our mindset is changing all the time such that new acquisitions reflect changing tastes, attitudes, and so on. Our Civil War buff might add an old pocket piece or love token to the collection because one was seen in a museum. Consequently, the collection is evolving, becoming more personal (as our imagined images of history evolve over time).

   Why would you want to play follow the leader by limiting your collecting to a folder? What does this say about you? And the art part? Well, it is like painting-by-the-numbers.

   I have heard more than a few seasoned numismatists reflect that eventually the true collector will end up seeking die-varieties, tokens, themes, and so on. Why is this? Because these avenues are off the grid. Such items have to be diligently hunted for (and sometimes not found). And, they allow more creativity in creating sets that reflect the personal taste of the collector. Next up, we will explore contextual collecting, as this gets us nearer to the embrace of the coin collecting necromancer.

July 25, 2015

Old Sails: A stylized Carrack from Portuguese Malacca

Here is one of my favorite ships.
   This one is small dime-sized coin (measuring 17mm and 2.2 grams) of tin and lead. It has no legend or date,  but it has been identified as a one dinheiro coin from the Portuguese colony at Malacca. The colony was located in Malaysia and was a major port along the spice-route.
   This colony was seized from the local shahs in about 1511, and it remained in Portuguese hands until 1641 when the Dutch East India Company took control. The colony was heavily fortified and was never safe, as it was surrounded by Islamic states that wanted to reassert themselves.
   This piece has been attributed to the reign of Sebastian of Portugal who ruled from 1557 to 1578.
   The ship appears to be a stylized carrack. Its symmetrical rendering fills the flan. Carracks are characterized by bold fore- and aft-castles. These features produce a U-shape where the middle section of the ship is lower at the gunwales. This feature is evident on the Portuguese coin. Also, it appears that the bow is facing right, as the fore-castle shows slanting line at its forward base.
   Carracks tended to have deep hulls suitable for carrying cargo -- this appears to be emphasized on this coin as well. Finally, two masts are seen: a large center mast with two stays and a small foremast. Both masts have yardarms at the top.
   Carracks were introduced by the Portuguese and Spanish in the late 13th century and were popular for the next two centuries in various forms. The early ships had two or three masts, whereas later (and larger) ships could have four masts. A combination of square and lateen sails were used.
   In contrast, cogs were used primarily in the North Sea and North Atlantic by nations in the Hanseatic League. Although the bold center mast is similar to those found on cogs, the attribution of this coin to Malacca in the mid-1500s strongly suggests that this ship is a carrack and not a cog.
   On a personal note, I like the simplicity of the design. It fills the face of the coin with just enough elements to tell its story. The guides used by the engraver are clearly evident: a large center dot and a circle lightly etched into the die face. The lines are hand-cut with enough irregularity to pull you in. There are no rims to protect the bold lines of the ship, adding to its primitive look. Finally, the patina on this particular coin is just right in my opinion: encrusted corrosion salts create a pleasing contrast.

July 19, 2015

Do like a Necromancer (Part 4): Create a Set

Whereas curiosity and caprice (plus a certain genotype) sets us off on the road to collecting, our motives are often channeled by the opinion of others.
   I am often asked by members of my local coin club -- where I am the Education Director -- to give a tutorial on collecting. More annoying, I am asked to share the secrets of investing. How unfortunate, I often think.
   There is no "proper" way to collect.
   There is, I suppose, a proper way to invest money in coins. But who cares? The necromancer collector does not care! Life is too short to ruin this fun hobby with money grubbing concerns or vain aspirations of heroism.
   Life is also too short to allow someone else to tell you how to enjoy collecting coins. To do so is like asking an expert how to enjoy ice cream. I can hear it now: "Always start with vanilla; and after a you get a few pints under your belt, then move to chocolate." "Oh, and remember to lick it with tip of your tongue not the flat section in the middle." Yea, right.
Is this it? Dates and mints?
Go further; get creative; give these dimes more to say!
   In coin collecting, we often start accumulating a few items here and there. An unusual cent catches our eye, or perhaps we impulse buy a token with a ship on it -- maybe even a ruddy old cob. In the beginning, we either started out collecting like children do (innocently without self-reproach), or as adults, we acted like children. Blissfully so, I might add. But eventually, most folks find and follow the well-trodden path, getting serious and losing some of that wonderment in the process.
   The coin folder indoctrinated us. The Red Book shaped us. We began paying attention to dates and mint-marks. We developed set completion goals. Eventually, we specialized in a series like Lincoln cents or Mercury dimes.
   And so it goes.
   We adopt a rational collecting plan in accordance with the archival traditions we have seen in those stodgy museums we visited in the 6th grade. We strive to assemble of string of coins, in order by date and mint. How exciting is that? Rows of Mercury dimes can lead to boredom and nagging questions about the meaning of it all.
   P-D-S, P-D-S ... Why do we need them all? Was there ever a cash register in a corner store that contained a complete date-mint run of Mercury dimes? Put another way, does a complete set of dimes really take you back to simpler times? Why not do something more creative? Why not create your own set.
   Now I have to concede that there is nothing wrong with traditional set collecting. Maybe you are studying them to explore how the series evolved. Maybe you are one of those collectors that has an obsessive-compulsive kink in the mid-brain, and you are desperate to get them all. Or perhaps it is all about keeping the hunt going. All these factors notwithstanding, my question to you is this: Did you consider other alternatives? Did you choose your own path?
   Creating sets is the hallmark of collector. Why choose the prepackaged approach? Do your own thing. Do you have to have the 1916-D? Maybe you do; maybe you don't. But the answer lies with you, not the experts, not the Red Book, not the folder.
   Consider this: If you discovered an old register bank full of coins and untouched since 1950, what would be in it? Now, this would be an interesting collection. Each coin would have to be selected for a reason. And yes, maybe you could spike it with a 1916-D -- but at least it would not be because a vacant hole in blue told you so.