Offer them for trade or sale here, give them to kids at the stamp club, give them out at Halloween instead of pencils, wallpaper your stamp room, or send them to me!
Chris
"Offer them for trade or sale here, give them to kids at the stamp club, give them out at Halloween instead of pencils, wallpaper your stamp room, or send them to me!"
Peter
I am sure Chris was speaking tongue in cheek. Such things have substantial value, as you know, but would find a buyer only among those who specialized in this area. I suggest you assemble a complete inventory supported by photos and contact a major dealer/auction house who handles Victorian era stamps (I do not know who they are, but I'll be someone here will).
Not knowing your level of wealth, I cannot speak to whether they're worth your trouble. I bet you could get a fair price if you offered them here! I also bet I could not afford them, so that part about sending them to me was tongue-in-cheek.
Chris
"Such things have substantial value, as you know"
We've been discussing ways to increase traffic in the auctions, it's not just you. However they could also be offered in the classifieds, as a trade, or perhaps even in the approvals. Maybe there are even more ways to sell on StampoRama?
I'm wondering how much you were asking for them. I routinely buy stamps for about 10% of catalog (Mitch seems to be able to find them for 2 or 3%). These mostly cat for $2-3 anyway; at ten percent they'd only be twenty to thirty cents each (for Mitch, apparently, they'd be four to nine cents each). What were you expecting?
Chris
The catalog goes "out the window" for material such as this. IMHO a better way to research value would be prices realized in auction and on ebay. Chris, you are correct that pricing them as individual stamps would not justify much above 10% of cv, if indeed that much. But the time and effort of assembling the reconstructed sheets adds a uniqueness to its value which cannot be assessed on cv alone. That is why I suggested what I did (and still believe it would be the best way to go).
I honestly do not have expectations of how much these will sell; I am doing research to see what various venues would value these. Previously I offered the full sheets for less than 10% CV. I now have a good idea from one dealer (that they're pretty much without value), and hope to ask a couple of others from feedback on dealers that I got from another post. I was hoping someone here might have a general idea of potential sales value too as we have a good cross section of collectors here, including many GB collectors. I thank you both for your replies; it adds to my information base.
Thanks Nelson and Chris. This gives me a good perspective on the values.
Peter
If you have a look at the Approvals section (on this board) you will find (I think) 20 Penny reds for sale by a seller called StampCellar. Each one is for sale at $2.25 if I remember correctly.
I myself bought a MINT Penny Red last week from E-Bay, and I paid £7.60 including post and packing from someone in the UK.
For stamps costing more than £10 I nearly always buy at an auction house I trust, here in the UK that would be Universal Philatelic Auctions. If you go to their website they have a lot of their catalogues on-line so you can see many Penny Reds (often illustrated) and the prices they are offered at and ultimately the prices they actually bring.
The thing I like about UPA is that if a stamp isn't sold it goes in the next auction until it is sold, often it appears 4 or 5 times and is reduced by 10% each time which I think gives a very good indication of what the market is prepared to pay.
Hope this helps.
It is unlikely that anyone here would be able to afford to buy your collection as one lot ( or am I being pessimistic or unwarrantably intrusive about our members wealth!! ).
Plate reconstruction is popular in the UK,and sizeable collections of the same plate number would probably best be offered over here.Small selections of mixed plate numbers could be sold or traded on Stamporama. Identifiable numeral postmarks might be another way of "lotting", particularly if there are any scarce offices - there might even be some GB used abroad examples.
Penny plates is one of these areas where knowledge is crucial and the first thing you need to do is identify what exactly you have in your possession.
As has been said already catalogue value is to some extent a myth, however what is certain is that provided you can identify your target market every undamaged 1d red is saleable somewhere.Unless there is anything really special selling individual copies is probably not a good use of time, but varied quantities to suit the anticipated size of your potential customer's pocket should repay your efforts.
Malcolm
Over the years I have accumulated through bulk purchases or inheritance, several sets of penny reds; they must number in the thousands. Some are in sets by plate number, some in reconstructed corner letter sheets without regard to plate number, a few by plate number AND reconstructed corner letter sheets (see example below), and then loose ones (most with plate numbers identifiable). I really don't want all these varieties; I may keep a collection of cleaner issues with plate numbers, multiples, and on-cover.
So what do I do with the vast majority of these penny reds? I no longer sell on eBay. So any suggestions on what to do with them?
Thanks.
Peter
Plate 206, partially reconstructed corner letter sheet
re: Value of Penny Reds
Offer them for trade or sale here, give them to kids at the stamp club, give them out at Halloween instead of pencils, wallpaper your stamp room, or send them to me!
Chris
re: Value of Penny Reds
"Offer them for trade or sale here, give them to kids at the stamp club, give them out at Halloween instead of pencils, wallpaper your stamp room, or send them to me!"
re: Value of Penny Reds
Peter
I am sure Chris was speaking tongue in cheek. Such things have substantial value, as you know, but would find a buyer only among those who specialized in this area. I suggest you assemble a complete inventory supported by photos and contact a major dealer/auction house who handles Victorian era stamps (I do not know who they are, but I'll be someone here will).
re: Value of Penny Reds
Not knowing your level of wealth, I cannot speak to whether they're worth your trouble. I bet you could get a fair price if you offered them here! I also bet I could not afford them, so that part about sending them to me was tongue-in-cheek.
Chris
re: Value of Penny Reds
"Such things have substantial value, as you know"
re: Value of Penny Reds
We've been discussing ways to increase traffic in the auctions, it's not just you. However they could also be offered in the classifieds, as a trade, or perhaps even in the approvals. Maybe there are even more ways to sell on StampoRama?
I'm wondering how much you were asking for them. I routinely buy stamps for about 10% of catalog (Mitch seems to be able to find them for 2 or 3%). These mostly cat for $2-3 anyway; at ten percent they'd only be twenty to thirty cents each (for Mitch, apparently, they'd be four to nine cents each). What were you expecting?
Chris
re: Value of Penny Reds
The catalog goes "out the window" for material such as this. IMHO a better way to research value would be prices realized in auction and on ebay. Chris, you are correct that pricing them as individual stamps would not justify much above 10% of cv, if indeed that much. But the time and effort of assembling the reconstructed sheets adds a uniqueness to its value which cannot be assessed on cv alone. That is why I suggested what I did (and still believe it would be the best way to go).
re: Value of Penny Reds
I honestly do not have expectations of how much these will sell; I am doing research to see what various venues would value these. Previously I offered the full sheets for less than 10% CV. I now have a good idea from one dealer (that they're pretty much without value), and hope to ask a couple of others from feedback on dealers that I got from another post. I was hoping someone here might have a general idea of potential sales value too as we have a good cross section of collectors here, including many GB collectors. I thank you both for your replies; it adds to my information base.
re: Value of Penny Reds
Thanks Nelson and Chris. This gives me a good perspective on the values.
Peter
re: Value of Penny Reds
If you have a look at the Approvals section (on this board) you will find (I think) 20 Penny reds for sale by a seller called StampCellar. Each one is for sale at $2.25 if I remember correctly.
I myself bought a MINT Penny Red last week from E-Bay, and I paid £7.60 including post and packing from someone in the UK.
For stamps costing more than £10 I nearly always buy at an auction house I trust, here in the UK that would be Universal Philatelic Auctions. If you go to their website they have a lot of their catalogues on-line so you can see many Penny Reds (often illustrated) and the prices they are offered at and ultimately the prices they actually bring.
The thing I like about UPA is that if a stamp isn't sold it goes in the next auction until it is sold, often it appears 4 or 5 times and is reduced by 10% each time which I think gives a very good indication of what the market is prepared to pay.
Hope this helps.
re: Value of Penny Reds
It is unlikely that anyone here would be able to afford to buy your collection as one lot ( or am I being pessimistic or unwarrantably intrusive about our members wealth!! ).
Plate reconstruction is popular in the UK,and sizeable collections of the same plate number would probably best be offered over here.Small selections of mixed plate numbers could be sold or traded on Stamporama. Identifiable numeral postmarks might be another way of "lotting", particularly if there are any scarce offices - there might even be some GB used abroad examples.
Penny plates is one of these areas where knowledge is crucial and the first thing you need to do is identify what exactly you have in your possession.
As has been said already catalogue value is to some extent a myth, however what is certain is that provided you can identify your target market every undamaged 1d red is saleable somewhere.Unless there is anything really special selling individual copies is probably not a good use of time, but varied quantities to suit the anticipated size of your potential customer's pocket should repay your efforts.
Malcolm