Saturday, January 16, 2010

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Buy Cheap Heritage Sports Collectibles Signature Sports Auction #701


Buy Low Price From Here Now

This profusely illustrated auction catalog for the Heritage Sports Collectibles Signature Sports Auction #701, conducted on September 10-11,2004, in Long Beach, CA, is accompanied by a complete list of the prices realized for each item sold. A valuable reference, which makes interesting reading for hobbyists and researchers.

Heritage Galleries & Auctioneers is the world's largest collectibles auction house (over $250 million in annual sales), and the third largest public auctioneer in the United States. Heritage specializes in live and online auctions in venues throughout the United States of rare coins and currency, vintage sports collectibles, comic books and comic art, illustration art, Americana, celebrity and music memorabilia, autographs, books, manuscripts, and historical memorabilia. Heritage now also auctions fine American and European paintings and decorative arts. Heritage's website offers free online auction results archives to its 150,000+ registered Internet bidder-members (membership is free), with over one million enlargeable images. Whether you are a collector or a potential seller or consignor, these back-issue auction catalogs from Amazon.com are a perfect way to learn more about Heritage and the collectibles categories and markets that interest you most.
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Customer Buzz
 "This does help in gauging past value on collectibles but do use it with caution" 2008-08-12
By K. Corn (Indianapolis,, IN United States)
As anyone owning a home as of the writing of this review (2008) knows, the market has been scary. Sport collectibles also have their ups and downs so any research or price guides you use should be browsed with that in mind.



Does it help to know that a particular item brought in zillions of dollars in a given year? Yes. But to gauge CURRENT value, the bottom line - always - is what a particular person is willing to pay on a particular day and time for an item. If it is a rare collectible and gets lots of media attention, you can probably count on it getting more money...or at least assume the odds are in your favor.



But vague and fickle variables like desirability, human emotion and other things will factor into the marketplace. I'm not writing this as just an opinion but based on sales of collectibles through the years, some of them sports collectibles. Prices rise and fall, often in line with the economy. Keep that in mind when appraising anything, from your home to that signed autograph.



Oh, yeah, another piece of rather morbid (but true) advice? If a famous person dies, the prices for his or her collectibles may be higher than they'll ever be again....or they may go higher. If you want the sure bet in price appreciation, you might consider selling while demand is high.



A related news item: as of this writing, Michael Phelps memorabilia is getting around $300 for an autographed 8x10 of him. But what will the same item bring in a year? A perusal of the value of Mark Spitz items might be sobering.



So there you have it - a product review and a personal take, too.


Buy Heritage Sports Collectibles Signature Sports Auction #701 Now

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