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Very interesting picture.. Look forward to from some, that have some thoughts on this,.
Hi Paul.
I cannot comment on whether this set are genuine or not (though they do look like they have a good chance on being right, and might I suggest a quick opinion from Roger Epperson). However I do know of 2 of these that have sold in the past couple of years. One at RR Auctions which was in worse condition to the one above which sold for a little over $1.3k, and then there is one that sold via Iconic Auctions for a whopping $5.6k (remember both these figures would include the buyers premium). They can be found here:
http://www.rrauction.com/past_auction_item.cfm?ID=3251432
http://iconicauctions.com/LotDetail.aspx?inventoryid=35459
And here is the pic of the signatures from Iconic close-up:
That should give you some idea.
Actually a little more digging shows your set you've pictured above recently sold via Tracks Auction for £1.2k (British pounds). It can be found here:
http://tracksauction.auctionserver.net/view-auctions/catalog/id/58/...
So that should give you a really go idea of what it's worth.
Here's a close-up of the signatures:
That then comes down to personal opinion and how much you want the item. Arguments have been, and will be, made over and over again about market value, but really it comes down to what value you put on it.
My personal opinion is $3,700 is the middle ground between the RR and Iconic ones, but at the same time it's a pretty big mark-up on what the seller won it for only last month. The latest The Who original line-up piece to sell sold only yesterday (RR Auctions) for about $3,000 inc. Buyers premium (see: http://www.rrauction.com/bidtracker_detail.cfm?IN=792), so I would say (and please remember this is only my opinion) that somewhere around $3,000 could be seen as fair. The Who signed pieces do go for less, but this is a realatively rare piece (though not unique).
But your question can only truely be answered by you.
Paul,
Condition and eye appeal are probably why the one at RRAuction sold for only $1,300. Two of the autographs are in black and hard to see compared to the two in blue, and the photo itself doesn't appear to be in as nice shape. I'm not surprised it sold for a fraction of the one at Iconic.
Agreed. The one that sold for $1,300 has major condition issues. Most deep-pocketed and discriminating collectors are going to avoid an example with significant condition issues and wait for a better one to surface and pay accordingly.
I agree that the one that sold at rr had signiture issues with John and Keith definitely affecting the price.I also was looking at rr auctions promo card that sold last night.if that went for 3000 with the juice then I would think this I piece is worth at least that much being It is a big picture and the sigs are in front.the sigs are also very decent.something to think about.this would be easy of we all hadn't seen the iconic one that sold for 5600.00
DO NOT BELIEVE ANY of the Iconic Auctions "SOLD" prices. They have shill bidders and also sell their own stuff -- so many times you will see the same item that "sold" for a ridiculously high price magically appear in their future auctions with a low opening bid. A buyer might think "hey -- this same WHO photo sold before for $5000 so it's gotta be a bargain at $3000! But it never did sell at $5000 -- the shill bidders ended up buying their own item back. This is a long time scam they've been running and it needs to be exposed.
I would wait, if you have money all you need is patience, a nice piece with good provenance will come up sooner or later. The ball is in your court, you will get something really nice, all it takes is money.
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