Monday, April 25, 2011

A new look at souvenir leaves

As I have previously blogged, I am not a big fan of souvenir leaves. They are sold in very limited quantities through private organizations in Israel. Personally, I only collect the ones that are available to collectors through the philatelic service. This weekend, I saw something new. Someone took a relatively common Hanukkah souvenir leaf from 1995, one that was sold through the philatelic service, and added a new stamp and cancellation in 2009. Apparently, the Carmel catalog then added these updated souvenir leaves to its catalog, and they are listed for several hundred dollars. So, to recap, they took a leaf that is available on E-bay for $5 or less, added a stamp and additional cancel, and somehow it is now worth 50X what it was before? It looks like several of these were done with different base souvenir leaves as well as different reasons for adding the additional stamps (I saw a 40th anniversary leaf have a 60th anniversary stamp and cancel added, for example). I don't understand why the Carmel catalog would add these as if they are official leaves. Sure, they are nice, if you like this type of thing, but I don't see any way the valuations are justified. I think all collectors should be cautious, and not just blindly trust any catalog valuation. If a catalog value doesn't make sense to you, it could be because it is not based on sales data, but on what the seller wants to get for them.

5 comments:

AmyBow said...

then again, sounds like a pretty good racket. someone is making good $ by duping people - why shouldn't it be you? ;)

Anonymous said...

It is listed because the owners of the catalog sell also such material. And I wouldn'n be surprises if they are the authors of this thing. I also don't understand why people pay so much money for souvenir that can't be even exhibited & are not redy to pay even 2 nominals for new definitives varieties. It's nonsense!

Anonymous said...

This is all starting to sound like charging whatever the market will bear. Souvenir leafs are fun to collect, but the market could easily get killed by pricing these items at an unrealistic level. This is an instance of buyer beware!!!!

Adam said...

I think it is very deceptive for Carmel to show a "catalog" price that is in no way related to reality.

sidmorgy said...

I agree with anonymous.
No one wants the souvenir sheets. The retail price i sunder 10% of CARMEL.