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Anyone ever collect beer cans?

Aug 27, 2022
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I'm not talking about the giant pyramid of cans that you make on your benders, I'm talking about beer cans from around the world different brews things like that
 
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I did, as a kid in the late 70s to early 80s. Had probably 200 or so from all around the world, some unopened. Had a few magazines/booklets for collectors showing the alleged worth of different cans. Used to search for them on sides of roads and especially along railroad tracks. My dad and my uncle bought a few in different stores.

My dad trashed them all while I was away at college or grad school. They probably weren't worth much by then anyway.

Only one I still have is a Hudepohl Cincinnati Reds World Series special edition can.
 
I'm not talking about the giant pyramid of cans that you make on your benders, I'm talking about beer cans from around the world different brews things like that

Yes! Did that for a couple decades. Went to college and my family threw away thousands of dollars worth of collectible cans before I could line my apartment walls with them. Was totally pssed.
 
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I remember kids trading the old conical cans before school. And the cans that required a can opener. Some kids had pricing books.

We did. Traded with and sold cans to neighbors. Went to garage sales looking for them and dug quite a few up over those early years. Traveled to old and abandoned breweries... Fun times as a kid
 
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I did, as a kid in the late 70s to early 80s. Had probably 200 or so from all around the world, some unopened. Had a few magazines/booklets for collectors showing the alleged worth of different cans. Used to search for them on sides of roads and especially along railroad tracks. My dad and my uncle bought a few in different stores.

My dad trashed them all while I was away at college or grad school. They probably weren't worth much by then anyway.

Only one I still have is a Hudepohl Cincinnati Reds World Series special edition can.

Same here re:family, but they were and are still worth some money. The problem for me was it was a shared collection with my siblings

Had a bunch of unopened Iron City cans with Steelers team photos from SB Championship seasons. Had some BRM (Hudepohl I think maybe). Want to say I had some other baseball team/player cans as well. Had a bunch of pinup themed cans. St Paulie Girl and one or two other brands. Got a ton of wildlife themed cans from beer brands popular in Wiscy, Iowa, MN, and the UP.
 
I'm not talking about the giant pyramid of cans that you make on your benders, I'm talking about beer cans from around the world different brews things like that

Had some from Japan, Israel, Australia, England, Scandinavia, plenty from Canada, about 7 or so cone tops. Quite a few solid tops but most were opened/ empty. Had a shelf wall full of cans, plus some crated/boxed multiples of the same, that we used fir trading. Had one sibling in the Navy and another that traveled and sent/brought us back some cool and rare finds.
 
Same here re:family, but they were and are still worth some money. The problem for me was it was a shared collection with my siblings

Had a bunch of unopened Iron City cans with Steelers team photos from SB Championship seasons. Had some BRM (Hudepohl I think maybe). Want to say I had some other baseball team/player cans as well. Had a bunch of pinup themed cans. St Paulie Girl and one or two other brands. Got a ton of wildlife themed cans from beer brands popular in Wiscy, Iowa, MN, and the UP.

I had several Olde Frothingslosh cans with "pinup girls." Yikes!

Images of Olde Frothingslosh beer cans

A lot of my opened cans were opened from the bottom so that the top remained untouched.

I also had several Iron City cans. I had good friends from Pittsburgh, and they would sometimes go back there to visit and get cans there for me.

It's interesting to me that there used to be so many regional/local beer brewers back in the 70s, and most went away as the big names came to dominate. By the 90s, it seemed like there were only a few major brands left around. Then there was another explosion of microbrews/local breweries in the 2000s, but there was no longer much interest in their cans (if they even provided their beer in cans).
 
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I had several Olde Frothingslosh cans with "pinup girls." Yikes!

Images of Olde Frothingslosh beer cans

A lot of my opened cans were opened from the bottom so that the top remained untouched.

I also had several Iron City cans. I had good friends from Pittsburgh, and they would sometimes go back there to visit and get cans there for me.

It's interesting to me that there used to be so many regional/local beer brewers back in the 70s, and most went away as the big names came to dominate. By the 90s, it seemed like there were only a few major brands left around. Then there was another explosion of microbrews/local breweries in the 2000s, but there was no longer much interest in their cans (if they even provided their beer in cans).
i remember an older frothingslosh slogan from somewhere back in the day “to wit to woo, the two-headed brew”
never could figure out what the hell that meant
 
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I had several Olde Frothingslosh cans with "pinup girls." Yikes!

Images of Olde Frothingslosh beer cans

A lot of my opened cans were opened from the bottom so that the top remained untouched.

I also had several Iron City cans. I had good friends from Pittsburgh, and they would sometimes go back there to visit and get cans there for me.

It's interesting to me that there used to be so many regional/local beer brewers back in the 70s, and most went away as the big names came to dominate. By the 90s, it seemed like there were only a few major brands left around. Then there was another explosion of microbrews/local breweries in the 2000s, but there was no longer much interest in their cans (if they even provided their beer in cans).

Oh yeah! Neighbor had those. We were able to trade for couple he had doubles of. Forgot about those. Parents weren't thrilled with them on display. Lol

Had TONS of different Schmidt cans with wildlife illustrations on them, too.

It's cyclical. Tons opened after WW2 and shut down in the late 50s early 60s. The labels that survived thrived because of marketing. Then the larger companies drove them out by bottoming out the price and buying them up.

Rinse and repeat for the 2000s. The beer is rarely as good as the marketing but the marketing is what keeps them afloat.
 
Found a six pack of Sterling beer cans in the attic of my old house in Evansville, IN. It was built in the 50’s…I imagine the construction crew enjoyed a few cold ones while they worked. I gave them to a musician friend in Evansville who wrote a song called Sterling Girl…they’re in his barn now where he holds concerts
 
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