MondoFW
Practically Family
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You know, my Japanese 1 teacher told me how he was making a lot of dough by flipping vintage Levis to Japanese collectors (the teacher was a native Japanese man). It dumbfounded me that those jeans would carry so much value there. Well, out of interest of Japan, I've already planned a trip there for when I graduate. Time to make bank, I say!Asking and getting are two different things. I hope no one is paying these prices. I've heard that Japanese collectors pay top dollar and then some. Still, this is crazy!
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And then there's an overabundance of archaic items from the 70s that ironically appear more outdated than clothing of prior generations. It truly was a fashion purgatory, and incidentally, one can cop a suit from the time for less than $30. We must hold our favorite decades to treasure before it all disappears.I get the feeling prices on a lot of stuff from the era we favour in these parts are beginning to climb as it gets rarer, 1949 being 68 years ago now.
I hope the hat I purchased wasn't one of those duds. I mentioned it in the eBay victories thread, and I'm feeling pretty good about my find. We'll see.If folks pay for the hat it is not over priced. It sells for exactly what it is worth to the buyer. This text may seem coy and is not my intension. If folks pay for it they have a need that was met.
I have paid much more than mentioned in the thread (so far) for a hat, not nearly the listed item in question, and have had no buyers remorse. In fact I have no illusions of re-selling and making a profit, but will continue to wear the hat as long as I can stand upright. The hats are worth exactly what I pay for them. I do purchase to wear. I am ot of the group who wishes to purchase and wear a couple times and re-sell or just purchase to collect or even purchase to re-sell. Not my preference.
Going farther, I have purchased duds. I am certain others have aquired these hats with promise that have appeared and are much less than anticipated. I rationalize it as the price of admission to wearing vintage hats. I generally have distributed them to others or offered them to my local thrift shop. BTW; Offering them to my local thrift shop has made me a prefered phone call away when something I would be interested in comes into the shop.
I do consider surrendering a vintage hat or two when I see the selling prices raise to very high prices. Being as I have more hats than 1 person should have, it is a consideration. But then, which hat do I offer? The gray Whippet, the dark grey Whippet, the brown Whippet, the Australian Whippet or even the chocolate Whippet? Inaction on my part. How in the world can we make such a decision? I help avoid the decisions by keeping a couple hats at the cabin or our vacation property. Spreading the wealth.
Vintage hats; It takes all kinds and prices to satisfy the market.
I hope I have contributed to the conversation. Best, Eric -
But, there are definitely listings an "outsider" could observe and recognize as worthwhile. Other are, well, pretty damn obvious.Capitalism in a nutshell. I get things being worth what the market will bear, but it's still hard for some of us to grasp. The collector paying millions for a baseball card that originally sold for pennies or someone paying hundreds of millions for a paining the artist couldn't give away. It's a fact of life, but it's hard to see the value as an outsider looking in. I'm sure that part of our troubles come from a bit of old fashioned envying.
I certainly don't begrudge anyone who has the resources spending whatever they want for any item; particularly when they are such gentlemen and share their finds with the rest of us.
Interestingly, last night I contacted the seller of this:
https://rover.ebay.com/rover/0/0/0?mpre=https://www.ebay.com/ulk/itm/231816571323
I apologize if this is someone here, but he gave me a VERY convoluted and insufficient justification for the price tag of this item. If it was gracely worn by Fred Astaire, I'd somewhat understand.