My advice -- it's a large show with 600+ booths (not sure exactly), rather than getting to see the ten largest sellers, really walk around the room, and look at all the booths, rather than focusing on the best of the best.
I get collectors who spend hours at my one booth. Anyone remember Hugh Jones? He always had a target list of who he would visit every day. During the 5 days of the National he easily spent 10+ hours talking to me and buying as he went along - every day. Bob Foster had a booth of his own and still found time to come and see what I was showcasing, and buy or sell to me.
Last year, I had a number of guys who spent hours at my booth -- most of them reselling what they bought. Why? Because I haver never graded even one item. Yes, I am a dying breed -- but truthfully most of what I sell was bought in the 70s and 80s, so I am happy with my profit. In fact, in the 1970s, I was buying so many collections that some of them are still sitting in storage where I left them -- after selling enough of the contents to make ten or twenty or more times what I paid for them. I guess its almost time for me to clean up my storage.
I practice what I preach -- and walk around shows all of the time -- once quickly and then another time slowly just at the booths I want to return to. It's sad but local shows in NY and Florida don't really have much vintage any more. I cut back to one show a number of years ago.
Another tip -- if you find something you need and have been looking for it for years, don't make the mistake many have made. I remember vividly a Gloria Rothstein show 20-25 years ago in Yonkers, NY. The show opened and several of my customers showed up quickly and stared at my stack of rare Old Judge cards that I had picked up from an antique dealer the weekend before and chose 4 of them and I quoted a price, and they said they will walk the show and be back, not asking me to hold them. They came back 15 minutes later and all off them were gone. That same thing happens time and time again.
Personally, I find it sad that collectors would pass the best show of the year because of money. Okay, I know I will get heated replies about this, but guess what, you can still spin the room and have lots of fun. If you don't buy a thing, such is life -- it goes on.
I really don't want to make this an advertisement for my booth, so I will not provide those details, but if you want to stop by, I am 6 booths from the main entrance.
Steve
DynamicTwo@aol.com