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berniek
03-29-2011, 05:17 PM
I have a package of Seagram's V.O. Canadian that is still in its original gift wrapper. I very carefully removed it and found that the bottle has seals dated 1960. It is marked 4/5 quart. There is also a narrow gold ribbon around the neck and down under the large label. I put it back. The gold paper wrapping has a mounted fancy plastic shield VO and a wide red ribbon running diagonally down the wrapper.
Is this item anything special for a collector or should I just open it up and enjoy it? Thanks.

Eric1965
03-30-2011, 02:58 AM
Nice to see an old bottle like this still around; however; as to value to a collector maybe 10 percent over retail tops. I would suggest alittle get together and crack the bottle and enjoy a very nice drink. Blended whisky's and others do not age in bottles. The bottle you have should taste the same as one you buy today.

Enjoy!!!!

berniek
03-30-2011, 05:00 PM
Thank you, Eric. I will follow your advice and enjoy the drink with friends.

Dale
03-30-2011, 05:37 PM
It only takes two to make value go through the roof, assuming you were selling at auction. If someone is willing to spend $9,500 hundred for it and someone else $10,000, it'll sell to the higher bidder - even if perceived market value was $35 and 100 bidders were only willing to go up to $35.

Why would one of those two bidders be willing to pay so much? Perhaps one has a spouse who drinks Seagram's VO, and they were married in 1960 and they want it as a golden anniversary gift. Perhaps the other is buying for their father who was born in 1960. You get the idea - rationality is out for the rest of the market but not those two bidders. $9,500 & $10,000 is rational to them.

That said, the main reasons the bottle could be more valuable is because of its known bottling date (not the age of the whisky), the rarity that one just cannot go out and find a Seagram's VO bottling of this date easily (since most of them have been consumed), the producer has changed hands and/or is defunct, the label and packaging has changed or has particular significance to collectors and lovers of Seagram's VO.

You could look at it the same way collectors of baseball cards see cards. They're not concerned about the bubble gum or tobacco but the rarity of the card, the history of the player, the age, condition of the card... A hall of famer's rookie card will always have more valuable than a journeyman player who has a few cups of coffee with a few different organizations. Especially so if half as many of the hall of famer's rookie card was printed as the journeyman's.

Seagram's VO is a mass-produced product with little value for rarity beyond its retail price, true. But a run of the mill bottle can become collectible and valuable because of some strange circumstances. Like I said to start, depending on the marketplace, it only takes two buyers (and sometimes just one) to take the value to unprecedented heights.

silverfish
03-31-2011, 03:50 PM
Why would one of those two bidders be willing to pay so much? Perhaps one has a spouse who drinks Seagram's VO, and they were married in 1960 and they want it as a golden anniversary gift. Perhaps the other is buying for their father who was born in 1960. You get the idea - rationality is out for the rest of the market but not those two bidders. $9,500 & $10,000 is rational to them.


I'll admit to having paid more than what a bottle is "worth" and
for the reason Dale cites - it was a "birthday bottle" bottled the
year I was born and to opened when I reach 50. One nice thing
about buying a bottle in this manner - since the bottle generally
has limited appeal, most bidders (to continue Dale's example) are
only willing to pay a smaller amount so if you do want that special
item, your higher bid may surpass the lower ones and you can still
get what you might consider a bargain for what you would have
paid.