Firsthand Account of the Christie's Star Trek Auction
DustCollector writes to mention a Scientific American blog post about the highly successful Star Trek auction at Christie's on Thursday. The props, from many different shows, went for far more than was estimated. From the article: "The auction board flickered in perpetual motion as dollars changed along with the equivalent in euros, British pounds, Hong Kong dollars and Japanese yen (what, no quatloos?). Picard's Enterprise-E captain's chair, estimated to sell for $7,000-$8,000, went for $52,000. Two prop wine bottles of 'Chateau Picard,' estimated to go for $500 to $700, sold for $5,500. 'That's probably a record for empty wine bottles,' the auctioneer quipped. The sale prices so exceeded the estimated price that absentee bidders--those who place a maximum and hope for the best--hardly stood a chance: I counted only two successful absentee bids in the first 124 lots."
You know those guys we always used to beat up in gum class?
...
Yeah, they ended up with all the money.
I'm being sarcastic of course, I lacked the bicepts to ever raise a fist in anger/frustration
My work here is dung.
The high bids made me wonder just why people were willing to pay thousands of dollars for cast resin and foam.
It's not just "cast resin and foam". It's "cast resin and foam" that was in Star Trek
Push Button, Receive Bacon
What *DID* you do in school?
:-)
Poking fun.
My mom says I'm cool.
Full-scale? That must have been a large room.
Recycle PCs and build a wireless community network www.hillsborough.org.nz
No mention of the flute from 'The Inner Light' that Picard played. I was thinking of putting in an absentee bid on that, but I knew no way I'd get it. I think they first listed it for something like $300, then upped it to $800 because of interest. Can't imagine what it really went for.
You better get some kind of certificate of authentication so your
parents can sell it after you move out of the basement.
Some notable items and sale prices, along with original estimates in parentheses:
-Borg alcove: $8,000 ($700)
-Borg mannequin: $9,000 ($800)
-Worf's Klingon baldric sash: $3,200 ($300)
-Six Romulan Senate chairs: $1,900 ($800)
-Type 2 phaser from Star Trek: Nemesis: $3,200 ($1,200)
-17-inch tall latex-foam statue of Zephraim Cochrane: $5,500 ($500)
-Captain Picard's black-and-grey uniform: $15,000 ($8,000)
-Borg cube model, 30 inches across (the small one): $80,000 ($1,500)
-Enterprise-E model: $110,000 ($12,000)
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i got a picture i drew when i was a kid of the enterprise, i've priced it at $3 for cost of supplies, its coloured in pen to! taking bids
How much does it cost to make a season of Star Trek?
I used to carry a bottle of whiskey for snake bite. And two snakes. -Nefarious Wheel
Appraisers working for auctions routinely set estimates lower than what they really expect the item will fetch at auction - both to encourage bidders to step up to the plate early on and so the auction can claim to get "much higher prices" than expected, thus enforcing the Christie's premium name to sellers/estates who are thinking of consigning items there. Afterall, they have to compete with Sothebys.
And if it turns out to be a very bad auction, at worst, they'll probably just hit estimates - and that doesn't sound as bad P/R wise than missing estimates entirely.
I found the number of currencies used interesting, and can imagine the work needed to get them converted back and forth fast enough to keep up with the action. One thing, though, there was no mention of bars of gold-pressed latinum.
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Lot descriptions
a ry.asp?intSaleID=20723
l otlist.asp?saleno=NYC1778
http://www.christies.com/LotFinder/search/LotSumm
Final Prices
http://www.christies.com/auction/results/results_
Thousands of lots, have fun!
Cure world hunger or bid on an original Enterprise model. Decisions, decisions.
'whore'? I think you need to hold either the higher moral or economic ground to make that kind of statement. I 'whored' myself out to former employers for considerably less. :-(
I'd hire Bill Shatner to sing me a "happy birthday" song. Will be worth every penny (or quatloo)!
-- You must be yay-high to rule the world.
A ferengi is crying happy tears.
// file: mice.h
#include "frickin_lasers.h"
You are clearly not enough of a geek. Majel Barrett would totally be a score, just get her to record some kickass login sounds for your PC. Or record all of your PBX prompts:
"This phone will self-destruct in 5 seconds."
You'd be the envy of Slashdot.
It's a feeding frenzy based on the idea that "rare" is the same as valuable. Same as what happened in St. Louis when they tore down old Busch Stadium. You could buy just about anything -- and people did. I don't know exactly *why* people were paying thousands of dollars for used urinals from old Busch, but I guess they figured that urinals go UP in value once the building they were housed in comes down. And much like this auction, I think the value is highest right now. The grandkids might say "Daddy, what's a Vulcan" and simply not get it. Beanie babies are worth all of about $10 now, even though at the height of popularity, people were paying hundreds of dollars for them.