answer a question with a question
)
In terms of your line about Value and Price, I was of course wrong. That is a statement not a question.
The question about the criteria for "fair" price implied, to me at least,, that you had criteria that you considered relevant and that were
perhaps different to those stated by others.
I would genuinely like to hear you expand and explain those two sentences and try and understand what you mean by them.
I have discussed some of my opinions on this in another thread.
home.watchprosite.com
At the end of the day if we collect, we have to buy watches and if we collect rare watches that don't often come up for sale we must decide what we feel is a "fair" price to pay. I am not in a position to pay any price asked of me for something no matter how much I love it.
It reads to me, and please correct me if I'm wrong, that your opinion is that the prices achieved for the DSA and the Polaris are a result of them being hyped into an iconic position they do not deserve.
My counter-argument, leaving aside whether the prices fetched at this auction were a result of auction fever or not, was that there is an ongoing trend in vintage watch collecting which is pushing up the price of each brands iconic output, certainly not confined to JLC, and that the price reached reflects the changing desires of vintage collectors and the recognition of value in these pieces.
These watches, as I think I explained, also have more value because they appeal to more than one set of collector, in this case the JLC collector, the dive watch collector, the "tool" watch collector and perhaps a few others.
I do not believe any amount of writing or publicity or re-issues can make a watch iconic unless that watch deserves to be iconic. We are not so shallow as that.
Sometimes I feel that a re-issue can actually reduce the value of the vintage watch, as it loses it's uniqueness to some collectors (just a feeling, nothing more).
From my personal experience I would not have been able to even start collecting if it wasn't for the internet, the forum discussions and the great articles so many people spent time and effort on researching and posting. I am indebted to them.
Many forums help people discern the fake from the real, advise on quality and price, and selflessly advise collectors who maybe have no other community to turn to for advice than the online ones.
I could go on and on with this discussion - and I am very happy to.