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New: Auto dealers and
auto shows have only new literature for free
for one year then it is gone. If you like
this year's Porsche and a dealer is nearby you
are in luck. If not, or if you want past years'
models, you will have to get them from a literature
dealer. Act quickly as prices trend up for recent
models because they are still in vogue.
Contemporary: After about 5 years the
newness wears off and demand slows down. The older
the brochures get, the more the prices rise, but
this is offset somewhat by styling, engineering
and performance changes that are now less exciting.
This is an excellent time to put together deals
for large purchases before prices rise significantly.
Once brochures are 20 years old, like the cars,
interest in the old literature begins anew.
Nostalgic: The kids are grown and adult
hobbies flourish. Memories of youthful years and
postponed accomplishments and goals send automotive
enthusiasts to restoring old collectible cars,
touring with clubs and collecting literature and
memorabilia from the past. Time and money are
more available and our hobbies make us feel good.
Whether it is the cars or the literature, demand
intensifies and, with only so much literature
available, prices increase rapidly. A good investment
early can become a great investment by the end
of this 30-year period.
Historic: If you cannot remember the cars
when they were new then the literature is historic.
Add 50 years to when you picked up a piece of
literature new, at about 15 years of age, and
you would be 65 years old. You may still be a
literature collector, but most collectors will
be younger and what you like will be historic,
not nostalgic. Most of those historical cars will
have strange names and be long forgotten. Maxwell,
Adler and Salmson prices may not fall, but the
rise in prices will be slow and getting slower.
Others, like Duesenberg, Bugatti and Packard,
will still get enthusiasts excited. Literature
on them is rare and expensive and demand will
keep the prices climbing. Today's 1962 Chevrolet
catalog will be more interesting to more collectors
than a 1930 Chevrolet catalog. But the 1930 will
still be a prize find for many collectors and
well worth a good price, but finding a buyer will
take some time.
Today thousands of teenagers are picking up brochures
at local car dealerships. When they go off to
college hopefully their mothers will not throw
those brochures in the trash, because until they
settle down with a house and family they will
probably still be car crazy. Twenty years from
now those kids will be grown and the "bug"
has a good chance of rekindling the spirit of
the cars of yesteryear. By the time they are 80
years old that historical literature will hopefully
find a new owner. The collector will sell it for
a nice profit to McLellan's Automotive History
and new collectors will enjoy it.
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