Hopefully, National Band gramophones will all very soon see a steep rise in their stock value. I have several portables I'd be willing to sell for £20,000 each!

To be fair to Sotheby's (and I'm usually someone who bashes auctioneers when they get things very wrong), they do correctly state that it is a National Band gramophone and the retailer is the name given in the title description, W. A. Webber. With that said, you do have to read the full description to see that so it is somewhat clumsily presented!drh wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 10:38 am Sotheby's gives it as "ca. 1930" and names a maker, but surely it's somewhat earlier than that, and the "maker" name tag is for a dealer, not a manufacturer? That would have been my assessment, anyhow, but I'm neither an auction house identification expert nor especially well versed in English phonographs, so perhaps I'm mistaken. As a personal matter, I agree that the decoration is spectacular, but the lines of the piece of furniture underneath aren't that appealing, at least to my eye. Certainly the amount realized is cause for.
You'd never get more than £30,000 for that!epigramophone wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 1:47 pm If I ever decide to sell mine I will be sure to call Sotheby's first![]()
I like the cabinet design of yours much better than that of the one that recently sold. Lovely machine (yours, that is--the Sotheby's one looks more like some sort of strange invading bug from the planet Blorf)!epigramophone wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 1:47 pm If I ever decide to sell mine I will be sure to call Sotheby's first![]()
Indeed, it looks like it was made for a 50's sci-fi B-film!drh wrote: ↑Sun Sep 10, 2023 12:24 pmthe Sotheby's one looks more like some sort of strange invading bug from the planet Blorf!epigramophone wrote: ↑Fri Sep 08, 2023 1:47 pm If I ever decide to sell mine I will be sure to call Sotheby's first![]()