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You cannot help but laugh when you see something like the below. Now think about this . This is NOT even the often seen Chester Gould (Dick Tracy creator) original "Dick Tracy" sketch. BUT, simply a note signed by him. Now if you know comic art you know a sketch is worth maybe 3-5 times that of just a plain signature. Then the next level is the original “daily” art. That is the original artwork used for the daily newspaper strip. Worth, usually several times that of an original sketch Two days ago a 1945Daily WITH Tracy in the strip sold for $455 on eBay.
But not of that means anything to these "characters" in Las Vegas. Take a look below:
http://cgi.ebay.com/CHESTER-GOULD-AUTOGRAPH-NOTE-SIGNED-03-28-1978-...
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Why was I expecting HistoryDirect as I clicked the link? I don't judge dealers by what they're pricing things at, because customers can check pricing out themselves. I judge them by the authenticity of their autographs, and they're pretty good. Not perfect, but better than the average bear.
HistoryDirect often offers things for 5-times or more what similar pieces would bring at most dealers or auctions, unframed. If the item is genuine and they pay the price...no harm, not fowl. If the item is questionable, that's a different story.
Steve,
That is your Subjective opinion. But I disagree. It indeed says something about character and integrity . Being an ethical dealer goes beyond just the “authenticity” factor. To think otherwise is quite naïve. You have to ask WHAT and WHO are they “baiting” with absurd pricing. The inexperienced tourist, the grandmother looking for a gift, the drunk who walks into their showroom in Las Vegas? The term “con-man” may come to mind for some. They obviously are “bypassing” REAL collectors. And hence living off the “idiot factor”. But, to dismiss their usury as “Ok, as long as it is real” is equally absurd.
Man (mike aring), that is such nonsense I feel a bit ridiculous even responding. First your analogy , “why set something out for $300 when someone will pay $400” is quite irrelevant, not to mention a sign of utter clue-less-ness. If you read the original post I would think you might understand we are not talking about $100 markups. So you lost credibility right there, and then you unfortunately don’t stop there. Instead you dig an even hole of “cluelessness” with your Old Navy analogy. Another drivel of nonsense and poor example.
But you go ahead and buy a $50 autograph for $3500. We need more fools in this industry…;}
gallery of history sure has some "interesting" prices... $400.00 for a neumar and $1300 for 2 of the 4 cast members of the honeymooners. Then again the JFK letter for $35k makes me think an authentic baseball ought to be just as much and even rarer with the F!
prices are way above this persons pay grade lol
Re: "It's also set item by item in cases like this where the item is rarer than others." ,... in THIS case?
What is so rare about a "printed" card signed by Chester Gould, that can be had on eBay or other auction on any given day for $50 ????
We're not talking about traditional capitalism, we are talking about outrageous USURY. I don’t expect anyone to admit it, but I am SURE if your mother /father/wife/sister knew you liked for example "Dick Tracy" and fell prey to a $50 piece, that she thought was worth $3500 because that was the selling price, the "God Bless America!" mentality would take on a whole different twist. It’s just a very "Stinky" element in the industry. Some folks have a conscience, and others, well you know the rest of the story....
I have NO problem with “I don't see anyone else agreeing with you!” .. Here is one case where NOT following the pack will be VERY easy to sleep on. nuff said........
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