Fierljeppen
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jan 26, 2018
- Messages
- 1,159
Fierljeppen: it will be a very sad day in the vise collector's world if you ever discontinue with this hobby! Your contributions are legendary and irreplaceable!!
I think that the collecting of vises and other smaller items [smaller than cars, trucks and boats] is driven by available space and that most very collectible vises or smaller items rarely need a mortgage to purchase, and can be stored in most folk's homes.. one doesn't need thousands of square feet of storage like for cars and trucks..
And while a rather extensive collection of vises may add up to many, many thousands of dollars, they are reletively indestructible.. so having expensive insurance covering damage due to fire or flood is rarely needed.. Unlike antique cars. where even the least valuable of my teen's, twenties or thirties cars if lost due to fire, the loss would far exceed my entire collection of over 200 vises..
And of course I do carry insurance on my shop, contents, and each individual antique car.. The $$#$%^%!! insurance on my cars costs more per month than my mortgage and property taxes.
Yeah, I do realize that I could reduce that insurance expense, either by going partially or totally uninsured, or to greatly reduce the number of cars in my collection.. BUT which ones to sell? For me it's like which son or daughter to sell?
So I think you are right: the vise collecting world will continue, at least for a decade or two. Until the newer generations who don't know how to use a hammer or screwdriver [much less a vise! ] become the prominent collector population.. And I'll be pushing up daisies by then..
PierceA.
If I didn't say it clearly enough: Fierljeppen: THANK YOU for your contributions to this group of vise collectors !!
I certainly do NOT mean to minimalize the contributions from so many other knowledgable and helpful members, certainly not to minimize the time and efforts of KMS, without whom the vise database would be seriously lacking in content.
I know that if I attempt to list all of the major contributors, I will forget dozens of very helpful people.
So you guys know who you are!! And my heartfelt thanks go out to you too !!
PierceA.
Thank you for your kind words, although you may be overstating things a bit.
Collecting vintage American Vises and everything that goes along with it, will probably be my main hobby until the day I die. I really can't explain my passion for vises, but it's real and I like it!
I collect a lot more vise periodicals, both original and digital, than I do vises. In fact, I'm trying to downsize my vise collection as we speak. It's not going well, but it's still a goal.
I'm really pleased to see how well the vise market is performing these days. The rare vises are finally getting the respect they so deserve, while the vise catalog relevance continues to climb, with no end in sight.
Vise puzzles and seeing interesting vises is what I enjoy the most at GJ, but answering vise questions with historical content is satisfying as well. It's very important to me that we have credible vise data for all of the vise collectors that are interested.
A special thanks to KMScott! He is doing such a great job hosting the "Vise Info Thread" and managing the "Vise Spreadsheet". His efforts with all of the individual contributions of the "vise community" really make the GarageJournal a vise collectors paradise.
Vise on!












