What Makes an Autograph Valuable?

Nick Howes
Nick Howes
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Many people believe simple celebrity or age make an autograph item valuable. Hardly.

Some of the most valuable items collectors have in their possession are journals by unknowns who witnessed and wrote about a famous event, such as a Civil War battle. So, number one, context can be very important.


Number two, condition is critical. It's amazing that people will keep an item signed by some minor celebrity (and in Hollywood, that covers most everyone; only major stars' autographs keep their value) and they'll let it become crumpled. Often, it's just a signature on a card, which few collectors are really interested in. They don't understand you have to keep the item in good condition, as I've written elsewhere.

In short, would you be willing to buy from a collector or autograph dealer an item that is in less than pristine condition? Especially if someone else has something similar that is?

Photos are Valued

Number three, the item itself is important. A signed index card, as I referred to before, is relatively valueless from a collector's standpoint. The best way to increase the value of something like that is to match it with a photo of the signer and mat them together in a frame. Otherwise, the signed card only imparts that the celebrity can sign his name.

Despite some really interesting autograph items that are out there, photos are most highly valued. Perhaps because they can be easily stored and displayed.

Some other nice items can be signed as well, including CD's, comic book covers (for a colorful wall display), programs (easily available at performances), hardcover books (especially by authors), or any number of other items. Robert ("Psycho") Bloch was once asked at a fan convention to actually sign a shower stall or a shower stall door, I'm not really sure which, and he did so, adding "Dangerous When Wet."

But it always comes back to photos. Professional autograph dealers who collect in-person autographs from celebrities at airports and public events keep boxes of alphabetically-arranged photos in their car trunks because that's what their customers want to buy...in-person signed photos.

 
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I would love to have a Lucille Ball or Desi Arnaz autograph!!

Posted on 01/08/2008 at 5:01:41 PM

This was educational. I had no idea.

Posted on 01/07/2008 at 8:01:16 PM

I think the Heston and Duvall autographs will retain some value. Duvall, at least, has won an Acadmy Award so any collector of Academy Award winners' autographs would need Duvall to complete his collection. That would affect value. I don't know if Heston has an Oscar or not. In any event, both are highly regarded actors who've appeared in some major motion pictures, so that should assure demand for their autographs.

Posted on 01/04/2008 at 10:01:58 AM

Great and useful article!!

Posted on 01/04/2008 at 8:01:14 AM

Good information - I love collecting autographs, but most of them are not valuable yet.

Posted on 01/04/2008 at 7:01:29 AM

So are my photos signed Charlton Heston by Charlton Heston and Robert Duvall signed by Robert Duvall worth anything? I have them in protective sheeting. Maybe when their dead ;-) Great article.

Posted on 01/04/2008 at 6:01:21 AM

Good article. Very interesting!

Posted on 01/03/2008 at 8:01:36 PM

Interesting info. Thank You fer sharin'. Mizpah. ;-}}>

Posted on 01/03/2008 at 5:01:25 PM

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