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Consulter la cote et le prix de Canda : 50 Dollars



Description : Canda : 50 Dollars or 1979 Elizabeth II., 31,10 gr. KM 125. Superbe
Prix: 0.00 USD C'est GRATUIT! créez un compte pour lire l'info
Estimations(basse-haute) : 700 EUR-900 EUR C'est GRATUIT! créez un compte pour lire l'info

À propos du lot n° 88
Titre : Canda : 50 Dollars
Dimensions : 31,10 gr.
Notes : Numismatic Collections ( fans, perfumes...) Photographs Documents, Autographs Books Paintings and drawings The hobby of collecting includes seeking, locating, acquiring, organizing, cataloging, displaying, storing, and maintaining whatever items are of interest to the individual collector. The scope of collecting is unlimited, which is expressed in the hyperbolic expression: If something exists, somebody somewhere collects them.[citation needed] The most obvious way to categorise collections is by the type of objects collected. Most collections are of manufactured commercial items, but natural objects such as birds' eggs, butterflies, rocks, and seashells can also be the subject of a collection. Some collectors may collect not a specific type of object, but instead objects with specific properties, for example, some people collect items that once belonged to famous people. Among collections of manufactured items, the objects may be antique, or simply collectible. Antiques are collectible items at least 100 years old, while collectibles can be arbitrarily recent. Collectors and dealers may use the word vintage to describe older collectibles. Items which were once everyday objects but may now be collectible since almost all those once produced have been destroyed or discarded are called ephemera. Philately, phillumeny, and deltiology (collecting postage stamps, matchboxes, and postcards) are forms of collecting which can be undertaken at minimal expense. Some collectors are generalists with very broad criteria for inclusion, while others focus on a subtopic within their area of interest. Some collectors accumulate arbitrarily many objects that meet the thematic and quality requirements of their collection, others—called completists or completionists—aim to acquire all items in a well-defined set that can in principle be completed, and others seek a limited number of items per category (e.g. one representative item per year of manufacture or place of purchase). The monetary value of objects is important to some collectors but irrelevant to others. Some collectors maintain objects in pristine condition, while others use the items they collect. Collecting is for some people a childhood hobby, but for others a lifelong pursuit or one that begins in adulthood. Collectors who begin early in life often modify their aims when they get older. Some novice collectors start purchasing items that appeal to them then slowly work at learning how to build a collection, while others prefer to develop some background in the field before starting to buy items. The emergence of the internet as a global forum for different collectors has resulted in many isolated enthusiasts finding each other. Collecting is a practice with a very old cultural history. The Egyptian Ptolemaic dynasty collected books from all over the known world at the Library of Alexandria. The Medici family, in Renaissance Florence, made the first effort to collect art by private patronage, this way artists could be free for the first time from the money given by the Church and Kings, this citizenship tradition continues today with the work of private art collectors. Many of the world's popular museums—from the Metropolitan in New York City to the Thyssen in Madrid or the Franz Mayer in Mexico City—have collections formed by the generous collectors that donated them to be seen by the general public. The collecting hobby is a modern descendant of the cabinet of curiosities which was common among scholars with the means and opportunities to acquire unusual items from the 16th century onwards. Planned collecting of ephemeral publications goes back at least to George Thomason in the reign of Charles I and Samuel Pepys in that of Charles II. Collecting engravings and other prints by those whose means did not allow them to buy original works of art also goes back many centuries. The progres
Leclere - Maison de ventes, Salle de vente , Marseille, FR C'est GRATUIT! créez un compte pour lire l'info
Titre de la vente : Collections : Livres, Philatélie, Numismatique, Cartes Postales, Documents Anciens
Date de la vente : 29/06/2017 C'est GRATUIT! créez un compte pour lire l'info
Référence de l'enchère : Live Sale

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