Today I visited the 2022 Newcastle Stamp & Coin Show.
By a stroke of luck when I was at a post office the other day the clerk mentioned the show and given the venue is walkable from mums I of course had to go.
Entry was free and the event was held in a very large hall with the two dozen or so booths reasonably well spaced out. I’d say they were about 60% stamp dealers, 30% coin/currency dealers and 10% supplies.
There were also hundreds of ‘panels’ showcasing articles on various stamp related topics and themes, many of which seemed to be written by club members. I particularly enjoyed a lengthy history (with examples) on depictions of dragons on stamps.
Dealers ranged from those selling inexpensive international stamps to a few selling high end pieces for serious collectors (the most expensive single stamp I saw was A$8900). I was very pleasantly surprised to find a few selling mint unused (Australian) stamps and I invested heavily: watch your postcards for examples of some of these!
The coin/currency dealers were bittersweet. On one hand it was astonishing seeing all the various limited designs of the $1 and $2 coins, but on the other hand they were so pricey! The cheapest I saw the brand new ‘tooth fairy’ $2 was $15! That’s too expensive for me so I’ll hope mum gets that in her change one day and passes it on.
Some individual examples of the coins were incredibly expensive, and I couldn’t determine why. For instance I saw one honey bee $2 coin priced at $185, and it didn’t even seem to be graded. I pondered this briefly and walked on.
Rolled Australian coins of all denominations were available at several sellers, often at a premium. I regretted not asking the price of a roll of old 1c coins. but the stall was busy and the other customers seemed serious.
A multitude of pre-polymer Australian currency was available, and I purchased a few. It was nostalgic seeing the old $100 notes; if I ever received one of them as a child then I felt rich indeed! (For the non-Australians, the country switched from paper to polymer notes in 1992.)
I even saw bundles of every type of pre-polymer note, but the above brick (1000 old $1 notes) was the most astonishing. It wasn’t priced but I believe I overheard the dealer tell someone it was $4000.
I’ll end with two more items that caught my eye. The first was the above sheet of 55 beautiful Japanese stamps issued in 2020 to commemorate ‘international letter writing week‘.
The other was phone cards! Several sellers had them, and I saw examples from Australia, Japan and Europe. One guy explained to me that for a brief while they had been popular with the same people that collect stamps, but now ‘no one wants them’!
I stayed for about 2.5 hours, but even though I was well masked I began to get a bit uncomfortable when the (almost entirely unmasked) crowd thickened so I legged it out of there just before lunchtime.
It was time to order another bold and unusual burger from a fast food joint… but you can read about that one tomorrow 🙂