Postby SilverSurfer » Sun Apr 17, 2011 10:52 pm
I apologize that I have nothing to offer in a constructive sense, only useless, hand-wringing, "ain't it awful" commentary. I've always collected on a tight budget with an eye out for the wolf at the door, and so concentrated mainly on flatware, snagging most items off on-line auctions, and paying no more than 70% of bullion value for items with no historic or aesthetic appeal, and usually limiting my self to under 2x (or sometimes 3x for something really tasty) scrap value for collectible pieces (remember, this is for flatware). But this was back when silver was going for much less, from around six dollars an ounce up to about eighteen dollars an ounce, at which time I dropped out of the market. So even my collectible pieces are worth more now in scrap value (from a decent recycler) than what I paid for them. I have some items I'd let go without any pangs of conscience (such as Art Deco spoons and homely 20th century German soup ladles), but also have a few modest pieces that well deserve preservation, such as a Mary Matthew serving spoon, an essentially unused Anne Robertson serving spoon (planishing marks still quite visible), a Twentyman sauce ladle, and a matching set of four Robert Keay toddy ladles). All of these were purchased from people who apparently didn't fully comprehend what they had, people who might now likely just sell to a recycler for scrap value. But like I said, I have no constructive suggestions. Sigh.
SS