
I know prices on things have gone up since the pandemic, but a $30 price-jump for paper sleeves seems just a bit opportunistic. So has anyone found any other sources or is this now the world we live in and time for me to suck it up?

The price of paper and production of anything made of paper has gone way up in recent months. I work part time in a bookstore and the price of paperback books goes up about $1 a month as books get reprinted. And now some of the paperback books cost $20 where they use to be $14 or $15 last year. It seems really expensive, but it is all due to supply and demand. I am sure the paper for the record sleeves is costing more for the same reasons. It is simply a fact of life it seems.Dischoard wrote: Tue Mar 01, 2022 1:12 pm Like many I bought the 28# goldcraft paper sleeves from BagsUnlimited. I bought two boxes of 500 over the course of a year for $142 each (which seemed high for paper back then). In looking on the site today I see the price has now gone up by OVER 20% to $172 for the same quantity sleeves. It's funny, at a local thrift store I can often find 10" 78s for $.50 a piece, with these sleeves I almost double the cost of each record![]()
I know prices on things have gone up since the pandemic, but a $30 price-jump for paper sleeves seems just a bit opportunistic. So has anyone found any other sources or is this now the world we live in and time for me to suck it up?![]()
Thank you for that insight. The trouble is, when prices go up, they rarely go back down. My guess is this may be the new norm.melvind wrote: Wed Mar 02, 2022 4:41 pm
The price of paper and production of anything made of paper has gone way up in recent months. I work part time in a bookstore and the price of paperback books goes up about $1 a month as books get reprinted. And now some of the paperback books cost $20 where they use to be $14 or $15 last year. It seems really expensive, but it is all due to supply and demand. I am sure the paper for the record sleeves is costing more for the same reasons. It is simply a fact of life it seems.
Same here! As well as the historical interest, there's a satisfaction and something 'right' about seeing a record in its original or period-appropriate cover. I have a small stock of the superb Nauck sleeves but I only use them for a few of my most precious records and unusual sizes. A collector friend who passed away years ago insisted on yet another term, "bag".epigramophone wrote: Thu Mar 03, 2022 4:43 am Am I alone in preferring to store my records in their original covers? For me, the period advertisements on manufacturers paper covers and dealers cardboard covers are an important and interesting archive. I only use new plain covers on records for which I am unable to find suitable originals.
The term "sleeve" did not come into general use until the advent of the vinyl LP. For78's the terms "cover" and "envelope" were commonly used.
epigramophone wrote: Thu Mar 03, 2022 4:43 am Am I alone in preferring to store my records in their original covers? For me, the period advertisements on manufacturers paper covers and dealers cardboard covers are an important and interesting archive. I only use new plain covers on records for which I am unable to find suitable originals.