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Value of 1888 Set of Chambers's Encyclopedias?

I have 9 books from the 10 set of encyclopedias. Collier, Publisher, New York 1888. The inside pages are in good condition. The bindings on the books are unglued inside and frayed on the top and bottom edges.

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Gold Post Medal for All Time! 677 Posts
July 16, 20180 found this helpful

It might be worth something because it is over 100 years old, but it is incomplete. Take it to a couple of dealers for free appraisals

 

Gold Feedback Medal for All Time! 949 Feedbacks
July 17, 20180 found this helpful

Sets this old are usually bought by collectors and, unless it is very, very rare, they generally want books in at least fair condition and the bindings are very important. I believe the condition of your books will hinder a fast sale and you may have to go with selling individual books instead of as a set. Books may sell for $8-$15 each but all of these are very slow sellers.

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  • Here is some information about the history of this set.
  • en.wikipedia.org/.../Chambers%27s_Encyclopaedia
  • You could list your set for sale and show lots of pictures as well as a very good description and you may be lucky and find a buyer.
  • I think you should start your price at $50-$100 and see if you get any interested buyers. It is free to list on eBay but if your item sells, the eBay and PayPal fees will be approximately 13-15% of the total sale (sale price plus shipping charges) so keep this in mind.
  • Also, be sure to check shipping costs as these have to be accurate so the buyer will pay sufficient amount to cover the shipping cost you will have to pay. This is a common problem with new sellers on eBay.
  • Here are some sets currently listed on eBay so you can see what others are asking for their sets (different sets/years). Asking prices are just that, what a seller is hoping to get for their items. Also, you may notice that many sellers are listing individual books instead of as a set.
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  • www.ebay.com/.../i.html?_nkw=chamber%27s+encyclopedia...
  • Here are listings showing what people actually bought and prices they paid. Books are usually very slow seller.
  • www.ebay.com/.../i.html?_nkw=chamber%27s+encyclopedia...
  • If you decide to sell you may want to check out Craigslist as many people like using this over eBay.
 

Bronze Feedback Medal for All Time! 196 Feedbacks
July 17, 20180 found this helpful

How I would research to find a current market value is as follows:

Go out to eBay and search completed auctions (see the link below):
and look for an apples to apples match to find your EXACT set (same number of books, same year, same condition) and see if they sold and what the selling price was.

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If you use something similar you are not going to get an exact value as sometimes there are similar items where one has a lot of value and the similar none...so if there are no sold listing for you exact set, keep checking back.

You may want to see if there is an exact match in the active auctions and set up an eBay WATCH to see when/if it sells and for how much.

If there are multiple exact items sold for different prices, I usually do an average to help me value my items I sell.

www.ebay.com/.../i.html?_from=R40&_nkw=chambers+encyclopedia...

I recommend ONLY using sold price not using current auctions and asking price, as people can ask the world, but value is only what people will pay.

At the moment there are 62 completed auctions for items with Chambers encyclopedia in the title on eBay, but if you filter to sold, there are only 10 sold and those 10 are all different looks/styles/conditions and values.

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When trying to determine your selling price (value), I use the price people paid PLUS shipping (which I know a lot of people disagree with me about) because if you are selling them at a face to face venue, it is helpful to know the EXACT amount someone forked over for an item when setting your price.

So, if someone paid 100 with free shipping (you could value the item at 100). If someone paid 50 for an item and 50 for shipping, same thing (50 + 50 = 100).

The thing with VALUE is it is TOTALLY DIFFERENT THAN PROFIT.

Meaning in the eBay example... if the item sold for $100 with free shipping, the seller only netted (and I am using round numbers for reference only) less than $50 because shipping something this heavy is expensive in that case is paid by the SELLER, plus the eBay and Paypal fees are paid by the seller also.

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The same less than $50 value is evident when the BUYER pays shipping (the seller can't count shipping as profit because even though the buyer paid for it, the seller spends it to get it to the buyer--but it can be counted as item value if selling in a face to face venue where no shipping is involved. The seller still pays fees here also so that is a wash.

Condition is everything, so if someone is selling a pristine set and it sold for $100, a less than pristine set would go for anywhere from 15-20% less...or even more if the condition is really bad.

Hope this helps you determine value for your books! Good luck!

 

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