What should be done. If you have no children or spouse(after your death), and your relations are not interested in the watches, but maybe just their value. What would be the right way to do for the collection(it is difficult to say liquidation)? I
You will never be late, at least. Heaven can't wait. And if your case is a bit harder to defend, and that you have to first go to purgatory, some " valuable " watches can help you to go to Heaven. I'm sure there are some watchnuts, there. Best, Nicolas.
and also that of many older cultures from Stone-, Bronze and Iron Age (motto: you never know what it will be good for). Considering your fantastic collection, Nicolas, it would be inexcusable to do so. Better donate it to a watch museum or something of th...
Passion in Life, Passion in Death. There is something very constant behind that. I love these tic tacs so much that I would not take the risk to let them to people who won't appreciate them as much as I did / do. BUT... I live in the hope that I will pass...
...is to ask a trusted watch buddy to supervise the sale of my pieces first to my collecting friends, then through the PuristS CM (and as needed subsequently through channels such as auctions). Proceeds to go to my trust, which first pays life income to m...
Sadly enough I have no really close watch friends to give the watch to. I am still hoping to inherit the watches to my son ... BTW, I like the bit of not telling your closest friends . Best regards, anaesdoc
Rolex vintages to the next guy with the highest forum post counts. A JLC vintage piece each for those who have exchanged 5000pms with you alone. Everything else to augment the already impressive collection of Blohmen and Stefan. Oh yes...the JLC minute re...
To your protege, akin to Clint Eastwood in Gran Turino Movie willing his prized car to the Vietnamese boy whom respected and believed him as a mentor. That way your legacy lives on.. I would do that, surely.
... pre-arrange so that the watches be given to the trusted watch friend(s) upon my death, unless my collection grows to the point where building a museum makes more sense, which is unlikely with my current occupation of course Ken
1. My guess is that many PuristS would find it much more an honor and a labor of love for the community rather than a burden 2. If you have an estate or trust set up with a trust company (such as the Northern Trust in Chicago) I am certain that they have ...
I have already decided to hand to family members some of my favourite pieces, and their distribution would be based on their level of horological sophistication and appreciative skills, and also with a eye on what they might have already inherited from me...
And good plan...monetarize everything, leave just one or two....maybe I should, but I fear selling my collection would prob precipitate and accelerate my demise faster and earlier. Best, seeya Saturday. Horo
Seriously, for me, I may still leave it to a relative with whom I was the closest or had the most fun with or grew up with... or even to the one with whom I had a tough relationship with. Funny things happen after a person passes... you tend to miss them....
all the money to charity. The favorite one will follow you right till the end, however you would not know what will happen when you close your eye right?? Give to someone who takes care of you the most as a souvenir.
He and I discuss our hobbies and he says, when I am 70 years old, I am going to sell off all but a few favorites. My wife and children wouldn't know what to do with them, and this way I get decent value and they go to reasonably good homes. I might choose...
How about sending the pieces to the manufacture who have museums dedicated to their brands? It would be a great way to share knowledge and specimens. Cheers PAt
My dad was an avid stamp collector. He had an impressively large collection and spent many an hour working on his collection. Several months prior to his death he turned the whole collection over to an auction house who sold it piecemeal. Interestingly, m...
.. and I love it that we're so open to discuss this in this forum There's a lot of wise suggestions, and my take is similar to many of you. Depending on the size of my collection, when the time comes, I will pass each of my child(ren) one or two pieces fr...