Selling A Large Collection

Used to read these forums about a year ago, before spending time on active duty. In a strange twist picked up a very large, very old, very low grade baseball card collection at the end of last year. Quitting my job soon and will spend the summer moving to the other side of the country. Once out west I would like to sell the collection, but unsure as to the best path to take. Haven't had much luck in talks with national dealers. Not sure about auction houses. Sell on this board? Dred the thought of having to use ebay. Looking for any suggestions, places to sell, how to break it down in various lots, camera or scanner recommendations
I've collected cards for a while, but never before was it worth my time or effort to actually sell them. Though I am fortunate to have sufficent savings, income will be zero in six weeks, so will definitely want to both liquidate easily and maximize sale price
The Cool thing since the condition is generally so bad, only most cards are so low won't have much trouble deciding what is worth grading
Tom
I've collected cards for a while, but never before was it worth my time or effort to actually sell them. Though I am fortunate to have sufficent savings, income will be zero in six weeks, so will definitely want to both liquidate easily and maximize sale price
The Cool thing since the condition is generally so bad, only most cards are so low won't have much trouble deciding what is worth grading
Tom
Tom
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Comments
50 t206
20 t205
100 Goudey, most 1933 a few 34
20 Diamond Stars
80 to 100 1939 Play Ball
1941 Play Ball DiMaggio
One Old Judge card
One of the t206 is a PSA 4, almost all the rest of these are poor, though a few have been graded
a decent percentage of Hall-of-Fame players among all of these
1968 complete set, mid-grade
67 and 69 partial sets
1961 Fleer near set
200+ 1955 Bowman, most with part of the border cut off
100+ 1953 Topps
a few hundred more Topps and Bowman from the 50s
a few thousand Topps cards from the 70s (mostly 72 and 76)
50 or so PSA graded 1959 Topps (Mostly 4s and 5s)
200 or so other graded cards -- majority would sell for no more than $10.
some modern stuff a half step above junk
If so shoot me a PM,
Mike
Good luck, much of that vintage stuff should sell regardless of condition.
Steve
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Bosox1976
Don't have the time, nor equipment to put together fair offers right now. Like I wrote above, have no job at the start of July, spend that month moving, then spend August getting everything ready, and starts selling by September -- still a long way off, but starting early can't hurt. I'll definitely start here and see what happens; send in a few things to be graded, put together $100 to $200 lots on request and see how far that gets.
A couple low quality pictures with a cell phone, 79 of the 33 and 34 Goudey's (14 Hall-of-Fame players and 44 t205 and t206 (nine Hall-of-Fame players). Might take some more pictures in the coming days just to practice and keep myself entertained (that carpeting is absolutely aweful):
To me, selling a bunch of singles at under $20 would be almost as bad as selling everything at once. Just need to find the right size lots to get the most money for the least hassle
T222's PSA 1 or better
Tom knows the best way to get the most money is to make an accurate inventory and then take the time to make decent photos and then re-post.
I've found setting fixed prices on individual lots to be the most effective.
On the selling I would post them for sale on the bst here and on net54 (to avoid any fees) then use ebay for what is left. If you were to go the auction house route you are looking at giving up 5-10% on the selling side plus another 15-20% fees on the buyer side, thats a lot of money to give up imo. One thing to note, the bigger the lot the less you will get per card but the less work involved, you need to find the right balance on how much time to invest in getting these sold vs how much you want to maximize their value. I would subscribe to VCP for a month after you get everything back from grading so you can have a good idea of what things are selling for by grade and use this info to price all your singles and lots.
Good luck!
Link to Brent's ebay page - Prewarcardcollector
At least send him a link to this thread and see what he thinks. Check out his sold auctions too.
His Fees - reasonable when you see his closed auction prices versus other sellers.
Bosox1976
<< <i>Good point on the fake/reprint stuff. I guess that is why the auction houses can take such a huge cut of the sale
To me, selling a bunch of singles at under $20 would be almost as bad as selling everything at once. Just need to find the right size lots to get the most money for the least hassle >>
Considering what you stated, selling it by the lot line items the way you have them posted, wouldn't be a bad idea...very well might get close to maximum value.
I don't think you're gonna get 10K no matter what you do.
Did I win yet?
<< <i>PS...I know I and others here would be happy to make you an offer but I for one am gonna have to see some better scans than what you posted. I would say scan the top 5 or 10 of what you feel are the most valuable cards, and you might receive an acceptable decent offer for the lot. If ya list em on ebay you're gonna have to scan em like this anyway so I don't think you're wasting your time by posting some pics here.. >>
I also would suggest buying a good scanner. I'm very happy with my epson perfection 4490 photo. It's very easy to use and costs around $150. Well worth the investment.
Also it wouldn't hurt to give the location of the cards. I've traveled several hundred miles to buy collections like yours. I gladly pay more for collections I can see and take with me.
Bottom line is that the more good work you put into it, the more you get. You have to decide if the extra expense and effort is worth the extra dollars you will get.
"Seems like you are expecting to get a lot more than the lot is probably worth."
While you both may end up being right, I don't think either of those statement are fair to the OP until more detail of what's involved is shown to us.
One price buys it all is tough.
Steve
Just messing around with the cell phone
1939 Playball, some kid had all of these pinned to their wall 70 years ago
Over 500 different 1969 Topps. Missing Mantle and Ryan, but most all other stars are there. Really like them a lot, surfaces seem almost new. Corners are just enough to keep it from being a high-dollar set. All the stars from 68 and 69 (Clemente, Rose and Williams at the top are the only three with corners nice enough to be worth grading
Finally, the few cards that are worth grading, 41 DiMaggio, t206 Marquard (only pre-war Hall-of-Fame card above a one), Old Judge, 68 Mantle (oc, but corners, surface and edges are all nice), 1941 Double Play Williams, t206 El Principe, 68 Ryan (4, or 4.5 on a good day)