
Donald Roussin has more than 8,500 beer cans displayed in his house in Maryland Heights. Roussin has been collecting cans for about 30 years and stores many of them in the basement. This panoramic image is composed of three photos taken with a fish-eye lens and electronically stitched together to present a 360-degree view
A while back Matt posted an article on the Art of Can Collecting and how it has been losing followers since its hay day in the 1970s and 1980s. While there may not be as many people starting collections as there was one, those people who having been collecting for 30 or 40 years have amassed quite the collection of not only cans, but also old brewery memorabilia. St. Louis Today posted a great article about some of the superstar collectors in the US. The big question they all have is: “what will happen to my collection when I pass on?” There probably aren’t people out there who want to buy a whole collection, or have the space for it; however, a group of dedicated collectors is working on setting up a Beer Museum is St. Louis. They have a space available and are looking for donations to preserve the history of beer.

Today’s
I’ve always thought collecting cans was a neat, beer-related hobby, and I’ve collected a number of beer bottles over the past few years. But I like keeping the bottles as more of a timeline of my drinking, as well as for the aesthetic value of the bottles, rather than finding rarities and collecting used cans and bottles just to have and hold.


