eNumismatist's Profile Page

eNumismatist
View Profile Contact   contact memberVisit My Store!
Member Since: May 6 2023 04:01 PM CDT
Last Login Activity: Dec 19 2024 08:04 PM CST
Feedback Rating: 100.00%
eBay Feedback History:
quasarcomics    2319eBay feedback star

About Me:

eNumismatist is a site started by a coin collector and sometime dealer for coin collectors. eNumismatist uses usacoinbook to sell coins since they have a fair business model. It is that simple.

I am in favor of what is known as “technical” grading standards under the old definition where the wear and other surface attributes of a coin are assessed against unchanging standards (although subjectivity is in play here since people see things differently!) “Market” grading (such as employed by the third party grading companies and many dealers today) frequently bears a strong resemblance to pushing for the maximum grade the market will bear at a particular time. This means the grade of your properly cared for coins could very well change over time. A great example of this is the desirability of the PCGS “rattler” early slabs as those coins were graded more conservatively, more in-line with then established technical grading standards. A technical grade does not change over time (assuming the coin itself does not change).

For coins I am selling, I will sometimes compare my coin to slabbed coins used by PCGS in their photo grading guide or other PCGS and NGC coins. This helps us understand the subjective grade assigned to similar coins by PCGS and NGC.

My collectibles background in brief:

I have collected coins off and on since 1971. I worked either part or full time in coin shops most of the time from 1974 to 1985. I have experience setting up and working coin shows.

I was the Manager of a used vinyl records and related collectibles store from 1984 to 1986 (way before the vinyl resurgence we have had in the last few years!). The record store is still in business (Fantasyland Records in Atlanta, GA) and the guy that started soon after me (hello Mark!) became Manager when I left and has been doing a great job ever since!

I started collecting comic books in 1977. From the early 1980s until the early 2000s I bought and sold comic books first as part of my collection and later as a part time business. I set up for a number of years in the 1980s and 1990s at the Atlanta Fantasy Fair, DragonCon, OrlandoCon and other comic book conventions. I ran mail bid and phone type auctions from about 1986 to 1998 or so, starting well before the internet took off. I was a relatively early ebay member and sold quite a bit there from 1998 through 2010, before moving to New Zealand. See my ebay account at this link –

https://www.ebay.com/fdbk/feedback_profile/quasarcomics?filter=feedback_page:All

to get an idea of my ebay reputation.

I also built up a good reputation on the New Zealand ebay competitor TradeMe when I lived there from late 2010 until mid 2021. See this link for my reputation there!

https://www.trademe.co.nz/members/feedback.aspx?type=s&member=3534391

It is still active as I had to leave some coins from my personal collection behind and a friend is doing an excellent job fulfilling those orders.

In 1992, Gary Carter, then publisher of the excellent comic book collector magazine The Comic Book Marketplace, placed a test order with me to confirm my comic book grading capabilities. Here is an article about Gary:

https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1991-12-05-vw-758-story.html

I was subsequently invited to be part of the American Association of Comic Book Collectors grading committee for the Sothebys annual comic book auctions organized by Jerry Weist. Unfortunately, Jerry died too soon. He will be missed. A couple articles here on him:

https://obituaries.gloucestertimes.com/obituary/jerry-weist-772443231

http://file770.com/jerry-weist-passes-away/

That was great fun and I did that all but a couple years from 1993 through the last Sothebys auction of that type in 2000. This was before the CGC (a sister company of NGC) slabs took off for comic book grading and I was able to personally hold some of the most valuable comic books around today (just check out the Sothebys comic book auction catalogs from those years to see what great books went through the grading committee. Too bad I did not buy any of them back then! 1993 Sotheby's Comic auction catalog

1994:

The reason for mentioning the above is simple: I have experience and do my best to be accurate and hope you will be a satisfied fellow collector who perhaps find something from items for your collection. I hope everything goes to other collectors to be part of their collections.

For questions or comments, please contact: Bruce W. Edwards, Director, eNumismatist.com