$3K Shoe Calendar$3K Shoe CalendarOn Wednesday, January 6th, 2010 at 7:00 pm, No Comments »
Well, it certainly appears that last year’s price escalation on prior-year shoe calendars was not a fluke. Originally priced at $13.99, just one year later, copies of Michel Tcherevkoff’s Shoe Fleur calendar are now showing asking prices at $2700-$3230…And two of those are ‘Used’ copies. (Screen shots from Amazon.com/Amazon marketplace) $3K ??!!?! Dollar sign. Three. Zero. Zero. Zero. Pardon me while I put my rapidly beating heart back into my chest. I think this may have caused me to have an itty-bitty, teensy-weensy, little, apoplectic fit. Apparently, due to their limited print period and tendency to, ahem, get used (ie. writting is *shocker* encouraged within their pages), some calendars are now (due to some form of retail optimism/insanity?) becoming commodified as rare books. It must be that whole wacky Econ 101 supply-and-demand thing rearing it’s head again:
Go figure. Now, am I about to start speculating on calendars to fund my kid’s college years? Not likely; speculation on collectibles is terribly risky and the buying public is very fickle and unpredictable in their habits. You really have to know the market & sell before the value drops; something that sells for $3000 from an independent bookseller may be available simultaneously on a site such as ebay for a significantly lower price. But, this situation might make me think twice and check the prices at the end of the year on my ‘art only’/decor calendars before I pass them onto my kids for scrapbooking purposes. Just saying… But really, calendars as rare books? When did this become common? And who, if any, is buying an out-of-date calendar at this incredibly inflated price point? Personally, at that price, I’d rather have the actual Bally’s or D&G’s I just wrote about. Hell, at this price, I could get a pair from both of them. Authentic Shops: Designer Shoes at Zappos.com Leave a CommentLeave a Reply |
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