As above really. I have a couple and will be running them as a side collection, because some colonies only issued notes - and they really do look good anyway ! Like the St. Helena £1 note I've just got today.
I stored mine in photo albums until recently. I am in the process of changing the storage. I know am starting to put them in plastic holders then putting them into page holders I cut down. The page holder has a label with all the information. Then they are stored in boxes I found, they have dividers. I will try and post pics later.
I keep most of mine in pages. They make a four note page that fits US currency nicely and another 3 note page that is quite a bit taller per note. Can't remember the exact dimensions.
My couple of higher value notes I have slabbed and keep in a safe.
"What we are is not as important as what we aren't"
I keep notes on the album for stamps, because for me it is incidental collection.
If the note is not part horizontally, insert it vertically. All pressed, nothing is bent or broken.
Обмен только по России!!!
Exchange only on Russia!!!
Échange seulement sur la Russie!!!
I keep mine in the same type of 3-ring binder that I use for my coins but instead of 20 pockets for 2x2 flips, each leaf has 3 pockets for banknotes. I have just over 100 banknotes in my collection but is really just a sideline to my coins and I don't actively pursue them.
Just because you can't see it ... doesn't mean it isn't there - Anon.
I don't collect notes, I've only got one Millenium $10 note that my father gave me and I keep in in the drawer of my bedside table along with all my other junk. Your note might benefit from a month or 2 stored under a stack of books to press it out a bit. I used to have a small collection and I used a first day cover album to store them in, similar to this one
Someone mentioned labelling and those of you who know me a little will not be surprised to hear I have a solution to that. I started off with little labels in the corner of the pocket but as the collection grew and I needed to shuffle notes about that became right pain. So after I had come up with my solution for labelling my coins (which some of you may have seen) then the logical progression was to apply the same principal to my banknotes:
OK, maybe a tad OCD, but aren't we all a bit like that to some degree?
Just because you can't see it ... doesn't mean it isn't there - Anon.
radick007 it's not OCD at all, its very nice and well organized.
Seriously the term OCD is so abused and applied to everything these days unfairly. Not everything has to be chaotic in life. Organizing things is good way of keeping things in order and preserving the quality of them as we are supposed to.
Real OCD would be illness that takes over our lives up to a point where we can't function normally and abandon our wellbeing in order to control a situation whatever it may be.
These days OCD is applied to everything unfairly - according to some opinions accountancy should be classed as professionally OCD, haha.
Once again - love the look and purpose of your notes holder.
No, if you see above, I commented that I don't collect banknotes. I just admire the ones that look nice. I have my hands full collecting coins without spending cash collecting banknotes and stamps and everything else I like looking at as well.
Verweis : KartWayradick007 it's not OCD at all, its very nice and well organized.
Seriously the term OCD is so abused and applied to everything these days unfairly. Not everything has to be chaotic in life. Organizing things is good way of keeping things in order and preserving the quality of them as we are supposed to.
Real OCD would be illness that takes over our lives up to a point where we can't function normally and abandon our wellbeing in order to control a situation whatever it may be.
These days OCD is applied to everything unfairly - according to some opinions accountancy should be classed as professionally OCD, haha.
Once again - love the look and purpose of your notes holder.
Apologies KartWay, I meant no offence and I did not intend to trivialise what can be a serious psychological disorder. I was merely attempting to make light my driving compulsion for order and neatness but perhaps could have phrased it better.
Just because you can't see it ... doesn't mean it isn't there - Anon.
lol, I didn't mean it like that. I wasn't offended. I just complimented your collection and said what I think of (people in general not you) people saying OCD about everything. What I meant was that it's not that you're OCD for taking the right care of something.
Damn, the more I explain, the weirder it sounds what I want to say.
Anyway the point was you're not the slightest bit of OCD It's cool what you've done with your notes.
You mean paper envelopes, like those you would send letters in?
It shouldn't do any harm, but why would you do that? The only people I know who do that are non-collector friends' parents/relatives who have wads of unredeemed Francs stuffed in their closets. I advise getting some plastic holders; you can also make a nice wall display out of them if you put them in frames.
(I had my 1943 Victoire 5000 Francs displayed on my bedroom wall for months)
Verweis : "CassTaylor"You mean paper envelopes, like those you would send letters in?
It shouldn't do any harm, but why would you do that? The only people I know who do that are non-collector friends' parents/relatives who have wads of unredeemed Francs stuffed in their closets. I advise getting some plastic holders; you can also make a nice wall display out of them if you put them in frames.
(I had my 1943 Victoire 5000 Francs displayed on my bedroom wall for months)
Yes, the normal mail envelopes. The thing is I didn;t ever collect notes, and now I am slowly getting familiar as a newbie. I thought if banknotes were safe like that could be taken out to display. Thanks for the idea, I will be getting some.
I wouldn't think it would be an issue. Just be sure to keep them out of the sun and somewhere dry. Moisture and humidity can wreak havoc on paper of any sort.
I suppose you could always look for an archive quality envelope and those little pieces of paper to slip in between each one, just to make sure they don't stick together.
"What we are is not as important as what we aren't"
I keep mine in archival quality mylar holders. I keep two sizes mainly. They are further stored in Canadian Mint bullion monster boxes. The mylar holders fit exactly. Easily stored.
Library Media Specialist, columnist, collector, and gardener...
Verweis : "Subha Barua"Thank you both for your ideas.
Not a problem!
There are two kinds of holders I use for my banknotes; the 'soft' plastic sleeves I use for most of my banknotes, and the larger, harder plastic holders that I use for my larger and/or more valuable/crisp banknotes.
My most valuable banknote is about 40€ worth. I store them in those plastic things whatever they are called, but the euro banknotes and the not worth so much banknotes are just in the shelf.
I also do not suffer from OCD, but like things an orderly state, which makes the banknotes easier to find.
These are my six small albums, which as you can see are lettered to designate to me certain countries. For example, the red album (A-E) contain banknotes form England, Scotland, Northern Ireland, Eire and a few western end of Europe.
Each banknote is then designates its own unique number, so England is first, so started at A1. (see below)
Each small label shows designated number, country and face value.
The other five albums then contain countries around the world, where I have ended at 'M', which covers the whole of North and South America.
'L' is the largest part, so has two albums.
If a new country is obtained, it goes into the most appropriate album.
This is a list of 'A' listed banknotes, which are all on my own database.
The database has seven columns. Number. Country, Face Value, Pic#, Banknote serial number, Front Description and Rear Description.
(Serial numbers, front and rear descriptions have not been included in the list below.
IDOLENZ it is a 500 count monster box. But you can buy them empty by going to apmex.com and searching for empty monster boxes. In yellow they sell for 11.99.
Library Media Specialist, columnist, collector, and gardener...
I have mine in albums with sheets of either 1, 2, or 3 pockets, depending on the banknote's size (similar to those in radrick007's post). I have about 7 or 8 albums now for my 1,500+ banknotes.
I haven't seen my collection since March last year, but this March I will return to my dear coins and banknotes.
I also have my banknotes in a 3 ring binder, along with my coin collection. I put most all coins in a 2x2 plastic flip before putting it in the binder; there are some in cardboard holders because that's how I got them and haven't tried to mess with it. Banknotes I try to put in thin plastic sleeves before putting them in the binder, but due to the size of different banknotes, a lot of times I can't find the right size sleeve to put it in so I just put them in the folder naked For my bullion coins, and some older, heavier silver coins, I have a separate hard box.
Being in Canada, My Canadian coins I have a separate binder for each denomination and one for US and one for all other international coins. I have one binder for tokens. HAD i for paper notes but decided to use dclear photo corners and frame them.
I have not yet decided as to where error coins should go . . . . . maybe with tokens . . . .
You cannot put banknotes or any valuable paper material in any paper storage pages. They use acid to make them and it can damage paper after some time. You need to get storage pages which were specifically made without use of acid. As I know a good source of different sizes made by BCW. For banknotes they produce 3 and 4 pocket pages. Work for all 3 hole binders. See photo of 2 different pages from my exchange album.