
Always amazes me when someone asks this much and then still wants the buyer to pay for shipping!

Ken
I agree with Larry, if the knife were mint and completely authentic which we really can’t tell from only pictures, the price would not be far off. The problem is, with 100 year old plus old knives, very few if any actually exist. Jim Parker, love him or hate him, used to say “with real estate it’s location, location, and location. With old knives, it’s condition, condition, and condition.” By the time.you adjusted that particular knife for condition, you wouldn’t have a very large percentage of the mint value left in my opinion. It looks like the stamps are in very poor condition which is a large part of the value of an old knife , plus it has considerable wear on the blades. Love those old Rogers bone handles.jlw257 wrote:Sadly the knife value is only as a keepsake.
If the knife were Mint the price is not that far off
Good morning Kootenjay, i read an article years ago in an American knife magazine about an extremely rare and in Mint condition Case pocket knife sold for $20,000. So i suppose to a collector of Case knives with the cash it was a good investment, things are always worth what someone is willing to pay for it. We would never see such knives over here. You have a good weekend my friend.kootenay joe wrote:What i learned from this thread is what you 'guys' already know. No other production knife brand, anywhere, worldwide, have values anywhere near the value of vintage Case knives. I did not know how large the gap is because i did not know how high Case values can go, which seems to be about four times higher than i had imagined.
kj