Curious on the boxes situation. When John Graham and I made some boxed glove purchases from Fort Worth seller about 20 years ago at the local national, the dealer told us that some of his boxes had deteriorated in the several years that he owned them and left in his cellar while the gloves generally were fine. My point is that age is harder on the cardboard than on the leather both left unused and untouched. The Fort Worth seller had gotten his gloves from the first 'big bang" mint glove sale (see James Mace glove book) originally sold by Lou Lipsett I believe. To me obviously condition and resultant display appeal has become the eye catchers in the glove market.
But in line with this thread has been the dearth of big sporting goods store sales such as the 50 to 100 Emjay finds in the south and the diminutive San Antonio batch of 30 gloves in the last 20 years.
Now, the most we see are at the most five to 10 gloves and these mostly by collectors rather than 'finds."
Just some thoughts.
