Quote:
Originally Posted by oldjudge
Lyman--With all due respect I think you are dead wrong on the valuation question. An unlisted Old Judge pose of Jim Tyng sold for approximately $20,000 in the last REA auction. Over the years I have found easily 25 unlisted Old Judge poses, cards probably no more or less scarce than the Tyng pose, and I guarantee you that since they are "listed" they would only sell for a small fraction of the Tyng price.
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Jay, with equally due respect to an Old Judge expert:
1) Are you saying that the Jim Tying card being "unlisted" is the sole reason the it sold for that price?
2) Did not the card, in effect, inherently become "listed" the instant that it appeared in the REA catalog--before it sold for that price?
3) What is your opinion of the value of the card today. Since it is now listed, is it worth much less today?
4) Do you think that your same rationale applies in other situations (say for an entirely new set like the 1921 Tip Top Bread issue, rather than a card like the Jim Tying card from an already established iconic set)?
5) Are there any exceptions to your "unlisted has a higher value" rationale or do you think that rule always applies?
6) What is the rationale that explains why an "unlisted" card has more value?
Jay, you know that I luv ya (and Dan Mckee is one of my all-time closest collector friends). We just seem to differ on this issue. Perhaps your answers to the above questions may convince me differently.
Lyman