Inside the Life of a Serious Numismatic Researcher
My alarm rings at 5:30 AM. Coffee brewing, I’m at my desk by 6:00, examining photographs of a possible 1838-O Half Dollar die marriage before the day job begins. This is what 15 hours a week of serious numismatic research looks like—and why it’s the most rewarding hobby I’ve ever known.
The Weekly Rhythm
Morning Sessions (6:00-7:30 AM, Monday-Friday): 7.5 hours
Early mornings offer uninterrupted focus. These 90-minute blocks handle:
- Auction preview review—examining images of upcoming lots
- Reference reading—one chapter of a numismatic text daily
- Price tracking—updating spreadsheets with recent sales
- Attribution work—comparing coins against die variety references
Lunch Research (12:00-12:45 PM, 3 days/week): 2.25 hours
Quick sessions during work lunch break:
- Forum participation—answering questions, learning from discussions
- News monitoring—PCGS, NGC, and dealer updates
- Want list maintenance—adjusting prices, adding new targets
Weekend Deep Dive (Saturday 8:00-10:00 AM): 2 hours
Extended session for projects requiring sustained attention:
- Die variety research and documentation
- Article writing for club newsletters
- Collection photography and cataloging
- Market analysis and strategy development
Show/Meeting Time (Variable): 3+ hours
Monthly coin club meetings, quarterly local shows, major shows 2-3 times yearly. Irreplaceable for hands-on learning and relationship building.
The Research Library
Serious numismatic research requires resources:
Essential References ($500-$2,000 investment):
- Red Book (annual edition)
- Specialized series references (VAM guide for Morgans, Overton for Bust Halves, etc.)
- Grading guides (PCGS/NGC official standards)
- Historical references (Breen’s Complete Encyclopedia)
Digital Resources:
- PCGS CoinFacts ($99/year)—population data, price guides, images
- NGC Census (free)—population and auction records
- Heritage Auction Archives (free)—decades of auction results
- Newman Numismatic Portal (free)—digitized historical references
Periodicals:
- The Numismatist (ANA membership)
- Coin World (subscription)
- Specialty club publications
The Research Process
Current project: 1838-O Half Dollar die marriages
Only 20 examples known. My research involves:
- Image collection: Gathering every available photograph from auction houses, collector contacts, and certification service archives
- Die characteristic mapping: Identifying unique die features (cracks, polishing lines, clash marks) that distinguish individual dies
- Pairing analysis: Determining which obverse dies were used with which reverse dies
- Provenance tracking: Tracing each known coin’s ownership history
- Documentation: Creating reference photographs and written descriptions
This project has consumed approximately 200 hours over 18 months. The result will be a definitive attribution guide that serves collectors for decades.
What Serious Research Produces
Personal benefits:
- Ability to identify underattributed varieties before purchase
- Recognition within the specialty community
- Invitations to examine important collections
- First-look opportunities from dealers aware of your expertise
Community contributions:
- Published research advancing collective knowledge
- Mentoring newer collectors in your specialty
- Improved attribution standards and resources
- Preservation of numismatic history
Balancing Research and Collecting
The researcher’s dilemma: time spent researching is time not spent purchasing. My approach:
- Research first, collect second—expertise prevents expensive mistakes
- Apply research immediately—each study session includes examining personal coins
- Let research guide purchases—buy what you understand deeply
- Accept slower collection growth—quality over quantity
Getting Started in Research
Begin with one narrow focus:
- Choose a specialty: One date, one mint, one die variety type
- Acquire core references: Buy the standard books for your specialty
- Join specialty organizations: LSCC for Seated Liberty, BCCS for Bust Coinage, etc.
- Connect with established researchers: Most welcome serious newcomers
- Document everything: Even observations that seem obvious may prove significant
The 15-Hour Reality
Is 15 hours weekly too much? Consider:
- The average American watches 28 hours of TV weekly
- Numismatic research is mentally engaging and historically educational
- The financial returns (avoided mistakes, identified bargains) offset time investment
- The social connections enrich life beyond the hobby
Fifteen hours a week, consistently applied over decades, produces expertise few achieve and satisfaction money cannot buy. The coins tell their stories—research lets you hear them.