What you
really need to know to survive if collecting antique lures... stuff your
mother didn't tell you about...
Part One:
Knowledge 101
| Grading | Books |
Prices | Fakes |
Ethics and the NFLCC | Mental Games |
Part Two: Rejection |
Auction-Action |
Tricks |
Trading |
Rarity |
Cleaning lures/boxes
WHY COLLECT ANTIQUE LURES?
You may ask
yourself...why collect fishing lures? Well, that's a valid question if the
only lures you've seen are those at Wal-Mart on a cardboard hanger with bubble
wrap holding the lure in place.
Let's first clear
the air on what is "Antique" and what is "Not Antique". In the lure
world, old and antique are relative. In the real world, antique
means pre-1900 for all intent and purposes. There just are not that many
commercially made lures prior to 1900. Most of the really excellent
collector material falls in the 1900 to 1940 era. Lures made after 1940 are
"old", but they are not antiques relatively speaking. Just because
your father used them doesn't make them "antiques". There
are plenty of forty year old lures around, but that just puts them into the
1960's and not much of quality was produced after that point. The
real quality material was made in this country prior to 1940. After that
time, production costs and the war limited the ability of anyone to produce
quality lures.
The other reason
the quality decreased is that plastics came into use after 1940, the big
companies started making cheaper lures and boxes to compete in the rapidly
expanding fishing tackle market. As with so many other things we
see today, "Made in America" just didn't stand for the level of quality
that was produced prior to World War II.
The golden era of
tackle is that time frame when Heddon, Shakespeare, Pflueger and the smaller
companies (miscellaneous) were competing to produce "quality" lures which were
hand painted and produced with glass eyes and wood bodies. Yes, your
father had some antique lures, but unless they were handed down from his
father, more than likely they are post 1940. If you want to collect post
1940 lures, that is great, but it isn't not the same as the earlier lures
which are relatively rare and getting more and more scarce. If you
have a plastic lure or even a wood Creek Chub made in the 40's or 50's, yes
it's old, but it is not an "Antique". (Yes, I know nothing
post-1900 is technically an antique, but there isn't much to discuss pre-1900.
So for the sake of argument, I call anything pre-1940...antique.)
The collectible
stuff is more on the level of early American art, a product of an era when it
was considered ones duty to do things the right way and competition was
organized to produce a superior product. The height of that era for antique
lures generally falls into the period from the turn of the century until just
prior to World War II.
High-grade early
fishing lures are as much a part of our American history as is the Winchester
Rifle was to the history of the West. No, the Indians were not involved in
this corner of history, but fishing lures were important to the men and women
who fished for pleasure or produced the fishing tackle during the early part
of this century. For some of us, the history is as important as the art.
The highly
decorated and carefully produced lures, boxes, advertising, and paperwork
which are collected today are rare and highly sought after works of
commercially produced art. Of the millions of lures produced, only a few
survived in excellent condition into this, the end of the twentieth century.
Because of the
beauty and rarity of these early pieces, the prices and demand have gradually
increased to the point where there is great interest among the large number of
collectors who frequent the antique and flea markets today. The collector base
and knowledge are growing daily.
For further
information on this thinking, see:
FISHING LURE COLLECTING KNOWLEDGE 101:
I don't
care what you collect, you can't have enough books or information on the
topic. I'm constantly amazed by people who want to start collecting and are
too cheap to buy a book on the area they want to collect. Invest in your
knowledge and it will pay you back a thousand times over. Start a large ringed
notebook of the various topics which interest you and keep adding pages as you
find the information. Print out this page and add it to the front of the book
for future reference. Join the NFLCC and order a copy of every catalog or
article which pertains to the area you wish to collect.
Buy
reference books. I even bought duplicates of the reference books I need
constantly and cut out the pages of the areas I collect so I don't have to lug
around the whole book. This was expensive initially, but cheap the first time
I needed that information at a show where I wouldn't have brought the whole
pile of books. My personal reference notebook has been reduced to about three
inches thick, and only contains the essential material related to underwater
minnows and boxes. I've also had to create one just for the
miscellaneous lures as that area is a specialty unto itself.
The
difference between a collector and a gatherer or accumulator is the knowledge
the collector gains by study. If you just want to gather as much stuff as you
can accumulate, then you don't need much knowledge. If you collect, you will
have structure, purpose, and direction to your acquisitions. If you spend more
than 20% of your free time thinking about fishing tackle collecting, you might
be a collector. If you spend more than 80% of your free time looking for or
thinking about tackle, you might be a dealer or have OCD (obsessive-compulsive
disorder).
When the
prices of what you wish to collect get high, you best be a very studious
collector or you are going to go broke accumulating junk. I have a friend who
"collects" and for the most part will never pick up a book, or read the many
articles relative to what he collects. His "fractured collection" is testimony
to the fact that a lack of knowledge is a detriment to the quality of your
collection.
Knowledge
is power, and in lure collecting, nothing will better serve you to survive the
rising tide of fakes and high prices than knowledge. Finding a lure or reel is
the easy part, identifying and figuring out exactly what you have and what it
is worth is the hard part. As quality lures become more scarce, the odds of
buying a "reconstructed" bait and box combination are great. If you don't know
the correct numbers on the box and the correct age of the bait that matches
the box, you may make a costly mistake. Knowledge is the only long term
answer. Sure, you can call a friend and pick his or her brain for a while, but
that gets old for both of you.
There are
several ways to accumulate a collection. You first have to understand that
there is a huge difference between "field finds" and "dealer or Internet
buys". The former requires lots of your time and luck, but little money, while
the latter requires lots of knowledge, money, and you better know someone you
can trust. Of course you could be one of those lucky individuals who inherits
a collection, but what fun is that?
Where to
start? First and foremost, learn all you can and then join the NFLCC. Go to
the tackle shows, look, listen, and learn, but don't buy at first. Above all,
ask questions before you buy. Make friends with older members who have
forgotten more than you or I will ever know. Read, read, read, and read some
more. Most serious collectors I know read some collecting related material
almost every night. You cannot know enough.
A word of
caution relative to attending tackle shows and the NFLCC is in order. If
you think rubbing elbows with other NFLCC collectors in this field is like
attending a boy scout jamboree, then you are going to be sadly mistaken.
Membership in the NFLCC, being a life member, or being a political type in the
club is not a guarantee that a given person is honest or forthright.
There is no set of guidelines for admission to the club to eliminate the
crooks. There are a lot of wonderful people in the club, but there are
some really cut-throat individuals at the shows who will befriend you and then
do everything possible to separate the fool (that would be you) and his money.
Be very careful and trust no one until they have proven their worth.
With lure collecting's high prices, the sharks are everywhere and some lures
bring more than a months pay for many of these people. Fakes and thief
are on the rise.
For some
individuals, the "hunt and find" is the attraction of the hobby. For these
people, collecting is frequently secondary and they typically sell what they
find. Great! It's a way for people who don't have time to hunt material to add
to their collections.
Link up
with a like-minded mentor who you can visit on a regular basis. I was
fortunate enough to find not one, but three or four mentors when I started a
few years ago and I can never thank them enough. Try to cultivate the
friendship of an older collector who is a student and has seen it all. It is
your only defense and most guys are more than happy to help a new collector if
he or she is serious. Network with friends. Get on the phone and talk to
people who share your interests. Yes, your phone bill will soar for a while,
but so will the friendships.
GRADING ANTIQUE LURES:
Grading lures
is subjective. In other words, it
is in the eye of the beholder for the most part. What is only very good plus
to me, may be called excellent minus by another person. Visual values vary
considerably from person to person. As we all know, not everyone has good
taste or appreciation for details. So, what is excellent condition? I keep a
set of photos of new condition lures to show people who don't understand what
excellent means. This is the only method I have found to educate someone who
doesn't understand the difference in old verses excellent. These terms are not
mutually exclusive, they can co-exist.
Once you
have a frame of reference, like the photos, for the ideal or excellent, then
you can discuss the variations from that ideal. To me, an excellent lure means
there are no hook pointers in the paint, absolutely no hook scrapes, no paint
off the belly weight, no paint chips and maybe only a very, very minor varnish
flake. The paint is shiny, but there may be age related crazing or minor
fracture cracks in the varnish or paint. Excellent minus allows for some minor
varnish defects, but no paint loss other than maybe very, very minor chips at
the tail or belly weight, and no hook drags. Hooks should be consistent with
the paint finish. Excellent plus means almost perfect. Mint means perfect and
untouched. If a lure has been touched up in any way or manner it is no longer
collectible in my book or a part of the grading system. Period.
One
variation to this excellent rule lies in evaluation of really early (c.
1900-1912) baits and boxes from certain companies. With many miscellaneous
company baits and some turn-of-the-century companies like Shakespeare or
Pflueger, the condition rarely, if ever, meets the excellent standard as just
outlined. In this case you have to make some allowances for age, wear, and
rarity, but generally not with post 1912 material when there was a larger
volume of production. For instance, Heddon made millions of L-rig lures, but
fewer were made in cup rig in 1906. Boxes were not made to last and they
didn't. If you find'em, get'em. There is a whole page on
grading boxes on this site.
There are
no hard and fast rules on grading, so you have to set your standards and live
with them. If the bait meets your standards, then that's fine, but don't
expect the next guy to agree with your excellent evaluation when most people
see it as only very good. If you have never seen what excellent looks like,
then it is very hard to understand just how great the condition can be on some
of the well preserved lures. There is no substitute for looking at or hand
holding large numbers of lures. Your brain eventually absorbs the condition
information after you stick your fingers often enough with hooks.
Take a
look at the photos, detailed terms, and discussion provided on
Grading: the good, the bad, and the ugly.
Also take a long look at the article on
Factors in Grading lures and boxes.
In my
experience, many large collections with "thousands" of lures are
"representative" collections and not "condition" collections. There are not
that many unused lures out there anymore in the older age range. Much of the
better material is in the hands of collectors and traded or sold in a small
circle of friends. Those friends are people of like-minded values who tend to
appreciate and are willing to pay for the quality they wish to place in their
collections. There is absolutely nothing wrong with doing a representative
collection, but don't think that just because it is old it will go up in
value. Typically, it is a combination of age and condition which drive the
higher prices. You can almost always get rid of a piece in truly excellent
condition before you can get rid of a piece for which you have to make
excuses.
RELATIVE
RARITY OF ANTIQUE LURES
Collecting
by rare colors is a whole different game. Figuring out what is rare and what
is not is difficult at best. Experience is the key. With fewer and
fewer lures being available to handle at shows, this is the hardest area to
learn. What is considered a rare color by one individual may be totally
different for another person because their experience will be different. When
a color for a bait is called "tough", just consider the source and then decide
if you want to pay extra for a supposedly rare or semi-rare color. To my
knowledge, there is no list or book which states what colors are rare and
which are considered tough. That knowledge is closely held by long-term
collectors and gained by experience.