Vintage Austria

Mar 13
2011

Vintage+Austria

Sell Vintage Collectable Dog Collars on eBay    by Avril Harper

Dog has long been man's best friend and many popular collectibles have developed from their relationship. One of the most highly priced and highly prized on eBay is dog collars.

The rarest and most expensive British collars date from the 15th to 18th centuries and were usually made from iron with spikes to protect working and hunting dogs from being savaged by wolves and boars. These collars were highly unattractive, more functional than decorative, but can be worth up to $2000 each. Compare this with collars made in Austria and Germany which were ornately carved from precious metals and packed with rare jewels, serving mainly as status symbols, and worth many thousands of dollars today.

Like almost every old and modern canine collectible you'll rarely find dog collars going unsold on eBay, even at grossly inflated prices, making this a great product to target individually or as part of an overall doggy-related venture selling vintage canine memorabilia or modern items like dog beds, kennels, more recent dog collars for practical or decorative purposes.

Despite the fact some early specimens are valued in hundreds or thousands of pounds, they can sometimes be found at offline auctions, especially country sales and auctions disposing of farming and family estates over several generations.

A dog collar I saw recently at a country house sale in Darlington went for just the equivalent of $50 against a possible value of several hundred dollars (£ equivalent) for similar items spotted in Miller's Collectables Price Guide.

Sadly I knew nothing of the collar's potential that day, which went to a dog loving individual, not a dealer, and doubtless a far higher price could be achieved by targeting a world packed with dog lovers, on eBay, where in the past few weeks:

* An Antique English Dog Collar from Cromer Hall in Norfolk went for £77.55. The seller added a neat touch that must surely have increased value and interest in the collar by mentioning Cromer Hall as the place Sir Arthur Conan Doyle visited while researching The Hound of the Baskervilles and apparently he also used Cromer Hall as the backdrop for the book. Consequently the collar appealed not only to dog lovers but also to Conan Doyle devotees and topographically to Cromer Hall and Norfolk enthusiasts.

* A sterling silver dog collar engraved '1938' and apparently used for Greyhounds fetched $356.99.

* A leather dog collar with pouch for messages carried by dogs on active service during World War II fetched $246.50.

* Even books about collectable dog collars fetch staggering prices on eBay in the UK, notably

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