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Thanks, now I wonder no more. Pretty interesting piece of Lego history.
Julie
Gary Istok wrote:
>
> >
>
> OK, a couple of things....
>
> The originator of this eBay auction item, my German buddy Kurt Richter (KRMM) of
> Memmingen Germany is probably one of the most knowledgeable LEGO people in the
> world, especially when it comes to old sets. He and I are in weekly correspondence
> on rare LEGO items.
>
> I've known about the existence of this doll for several months. What a lot of US
> collectors don't realize is that there is more interaction between the rare
> European collectors and Billund than the US Collectors and Billund. We in the USA
> tend to look toward Enfield Connecticut (LEGO USA), and they don't have the
> historic connection that Billund has (besides Billund is the LEGO World
> Headquarters). So I do believe that the Billund archive has been questioned about
> the authenticity/rarity of this item.
>
> I do believe in the authenticity of the LEGO doll. I have several pre-1960 LEGO
> sets that all show this same LEGO mechanic (is there a name for this fellow?) who
> was the LEGO mascot until the early 1960's, and always appeared on boxes, catalogs,
> and idea brochures.
>
> Kurt also has some very rare LEGO parts (1x3x2 blue classic window, yellow and
> clear classic LEGO garage doors, etc) that even I would drool over.
>
> The problem I see is that this doll may be more collectible to a rare doll
> collector, as opposed to an old LEGO set collector. The doll is outside of the
> general LEGO genre.
>
> Anyway, this is really a one-of-a-kind LEGO item that won't appeal to everyone.
>
> But I don't question the authenticity of the piece.
>
> My 2 cents worth,
> Gary Istok
>
> Lorbaat wrote:
>
> > In lugnet.market.auction, Julie Krenz writes:
> > > THE RAREST LEGO TOY EVER SEEN ON EBAY!?????
> > >
> > > http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=117914147
> > >
> > > just wunderin'
> >
> > The real problem with Ultra-rare collectibles like this is that it's hard to
> > authenticate... I mean, if it's supposedly so rare that even someone at Lego
> > would haev difficulty telling you if they ever made one (the Kristiansen's
> > collection of Lego toys isn't open to the public, is it?) then how are you to
> > know if it is what the person says it is? Even if they do say they made one,
> > if you can't find a picture or other references to back it up, how can you tell
> > a real from a counterfeit? And on top of that, when something is so totally
> > rare that few people have heard of it, how many collectors really want one?
> >
> > For example, there is much likely more interest in something like the
> > Metroliner Club Car, even if the Doll was priced the same (err, as Club Cars go
> > for).
> >
> > eric
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: ebay item, is it really...
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| (...) OK, a couple of things.... The originator of this eBay auction item, my German buddy Kurt Richter (KRMM) of Memmingen Germany is probably one of the most knowledgeable LEGO people in the world, especially when it comes to old sets. He and I (...) (25 years ago, 17-Jun-99, to lugnet.market.auction, lugnet.general)
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