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#136912 - 02/09/16 10:22 PM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years ***** [Re: Michael_Mason]
Eric Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 11/18/15
Posts: 1668
Loc: Michigan
Stock market.....I can state this as a fact. Dollars to Randalls.....So far in 2016 my 401k has lost over 400 Model 1-7"'s in a standard configuration. Oh Boy....Eric
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Eric

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#136915 - 02/09/16 11:40 PM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: Eric]
Sharpi Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/01/15
Posts: 645
Rhett Stidham was a Great Randall Dealer & did Great things for The RKS he is missed

Capt Stanaback picked up the RKS and deserves credit for it
not your Post...I brought it

If your offended I apologize Sir

My Randalls do better than my 401K
and the dividend is I can hold them and use them
unlike market shares

Ebay has always been full of profiteers or shall I say Pirateers
I bought my first a Bird and Trout there

and have waited near 5 years on a couple of occassions which only makes them sweeter

There are some great knives for sale here and when they are under priced or at market they turn to vapor quick

you gotta start some where

So polish em up and keep an edge

Sharpi

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#136917 - 02/10/16 09:29 AM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: Tattoo Bill]
W Polidori Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 02/09/16
Posts: 5791
Loc: Central New York
Originally Posted By: Tattoo Bill
Was there a Randall on "Pawn Stars" or something?


Funny you mention that Bill. I visited Pawn Stars this summer on a Las Vegas trip. Low and behold there was a Model 14 in the case along with other misc knives and swords. As I recall the asking price was nearly double current market values. In fact everything in the store was overpriced. It was just fun being there.
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#136918 - 02/10/16 09:33 AM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: Sharpi]
JE6245 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 01/02/14
Posts: 1064
Loc: Tallahassee FL
eek


Edited by JE6245 (02/10/16 01:58 PM)
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Jim E.

“If you don’t know where you are going, you might wind up someplace else.” – Yogi Berra

Me 2020

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#136922 - 02/10/16 11:08 AM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: JE6245]
Raindog Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 09/13/05
Posts: 1234
Loc: Coldwater, AL, These United St...
That's not true of all collectibles. For the past two years I have made a very comfortable living reselling LEGO bricks and sets. I visit WalMarts, Targets, KMarts, etc twice a year when they are performing their resets. If you know the right people to talk to you can usually get them to take 50% off of all clearance toys if you agree to clean their shelves. Some sets are quick-flipped, some are stored away for 2-3 years until the sets retire and become more valuable. I also operate an online brick store that sells individual bricks to Adult Fans of LEGO (AFOLs) to use when building their individual models. It may sound silly, selling individual little bricks, but it is well worth the time and effort to sort and inventory well over 100,000 bricks.

The main thing is, it keeps me from having to get a real job.


Edited by Raindog (02/10/16 11:09 AM)
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Gary Howie
RKS# 274
RKCC# 495

Death tugs at my ear and says: "Live, I am coming."
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#136923 - 02/10/16 11:14 AM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: Captain Chris Stanaback]
rikrak Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 10/13/06
Posts: 31
Loc: St.Louis, MO
Thanks Captain, nice to hear from you. Yes, I do understand the market and prices, I don't have any real regrets. It is a "buyers" market and that's cool in it's own way. I have to admit, sad are the days when I wanted a Trapper could not decide if I wanted a 5" or a 6" plus had a custom sheath "pouch" made for the big one. Great knives, in the end I decided I was a "fighter" knife guy as I'm more able to afford a tiny collection. Put them up on Ebay (no reserve) and made a few $100 easy, like I said not a real trader. Still I enjoy the knives, showing mine and having Guy Clark sign it after a show was pretty cool too. I still read up on the Randall Kinfe, enjoy the New Letter. There is still "one" more I need. I'm sure a few others will come to mind. But you know what they say about thinking, that first time, is always the hardest. You are right Stay Sharp.
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Rick G.--- RKS #883 Eschew Sesquipedalian Obfuscation

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#136925 - 02/10/16 11:53 AM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: rikrak]
RamKingJC Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 09/12/15
Posts: 3083
Star Wars LEGO's bought my gun safe... no joke. They were sitting in boxes for about 10 years, put em on eBay, next thing I know a shiny new safe showed up at my house... not a bad gig at all LOL
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James Caruso
RKCC #CM008
rugermark2jc@gmail.com

"First comes smiles, then lies. Last is gunfire."

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#136935 - 02/10/16 04:44 PM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: RamKingJC]
LarryWW1246 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 03/20/06
Posts: 1856
Chiming in 2-cents’ worth, just for the heck of it.

I have been into collecting and selling custom knives long enough to see some of the up’s and down’s you fellows mention.

One of the biggest problems I see for the collector who also wants to eventually get his money out (whether when he is still upright or in his estate) is the cost of selling.

The cost of selling can be high:
• You might have noticed how eBay + PayPal fees increasingly eat away at your net when you sell through them. It is not uncommon for eBay + PayPal to make more net on a sale than the consignor—the consignor can lose money while the online operations still make theirs.

• You might also be aware of the increased costs to rent tables at shows and for the travel expenses to attend those shows.
A seller needs to take these costs into account, unless he is indifferent to the cost of an item and whether he ever recovers the investment.

Only when there is a bull market on Randalls (or whatever you are selling) can you expect to make enough to cover the cost of selling and at least get your original cost out of a knife.

The best deal cost-wise is to list them on the Forum, but traffic here is light and we see how knives don’t always sell and sellers reduce asking prices just to move them.

If you leave your knives in your estate, the best way to move them post mortem is to leave them to a named person who appreciates them. If you have a lawyer or most other executors sell them, they are more interested in moving the inventory and closing out the paperwork than in maximizing the money they might conserve to the estate.

Barring that—at least have your wife or whoever you trust know what you have, where the knives are stored, where the inventory record is kept, what they cost, maybe how they can sell them, etc. Why? So the wife or whoever does not put them in a garage sale or take them to a flea market. (I might have mentioned in a previous post how a widow lady took her husband’s Loveless knives to a flea market and sold them for a couple hundred dollars each after having given away at least one to a family friend.)

By the way, when you do die and leave all this “stuff” for somebody to figure out and dispose of, your executor really does need to take into account what each item cost because in figuring the net worth of the estate they will take the Cost from the Sold Price, and look for the net value that accrues to the estate. I know of cases where families spent long days trying to discover records of purchases so they could establish the Cost Basis for the deceased’s collectibles. A good tax professional knows more about this than I do.

However, since I might actually sell a knife now and then and pay taxes on any profit, I record the Total Cost for acquiring each one. That includes Mileage associated with going to wherever I buy it, Postage involved in getting it delivered to me, Extras like Customer Wood, and so forth. You might be surprised how fast the Total Cost can go up when you keep track of each such expense.

For Randall folks, “catalogue price” is only a starting point when you consider the options we often want on a knife, so just looking at the Model Number and its Price in the catalogue won’t tell people later what you paid for the knife. Best to keep the Invoice that comes with each knife. Although I keep a spreadsheet with this information, one way to simplify it would be to make notations about non-invoiced expenses on the Shop Invoice and then put that into your records.

Enough already…Enjoy your Randalls!


Edited by LarryWW1246 (02/10/16 09:17 PM)
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Larry W. Williams
RKCC #CM-041
ABKA #046
RKS #1246

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#136937 - 02/10/16 05:46 PM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: LarryWW1246]
Sharpi Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/01/15
Posts: 645
Larry I'd be turning over in my grave if my Wife sold them for what I said I paid for them
Not So
Sharpi

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#136938 - 02/10/16 05:51 PM Re: Current Value Randall Knives in the Last 25 Years [Re: Sharpi]
RamKingJC Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 09/12/15
Posts: 3083
Not if she sold them to THIS guy! crazy
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James Caruso
RKCC #CM008
rugermark2jc@gmail.com

"First comes smiles, then lies. Last is gunfire."

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