I hadn't seen that Doak yet, so I just checked it out.
A nice solid glove, with a beautiful box, to boot. And, another one of those gloves that can give me some trouble when trying to assign a grade! This glove exhibits characteristics of several different grades, so it's kind of hard to pin one down. Considering just the glove alone, since the matching box can add a hefty premium:
- Stampings: Non-existent? They don't seem readable at all in the photos. That equates to "good"- or less- condition.
- Form: The glove seems to retain much of its form, placing it in the "excellent" range.
- Label(s): Both are present and intact, though soiled. "Excellent"
- Lining: Badly chafed and cracked, placing it in only "good" condition, at best.
- Outer shell & binding: These put the glove in the "excellent" range.
If a glove exhibits flaws that place it in "good" condition, can it be graded any higher if it has other qualities of higher grades? Do the flaws outweigh the pluses, or vise-versa?
Or, can we assign a value to each of the individual characteristics of the glove, then combine the values to arrive at a cumulative score that captures the overall appeal of the glove? Not necessarily a mathematical average of those individual scores, but a sum of all the parts that takes all of the characteristics together, as a whole. I suspect that is close to what must of us glovers already do, whether we are conscious of it or not. Some collectors hate poor linings, some value clear stampings and yet others demand intact, readable cloth patches. Apart from any standard grades, we will each form our own opinion on the overall condition of a glove.
Fortunately, the Vintage Baseball Glove Price Guide- in its infinite wisdom!- gives us guidelines for grading such a glove. For a glove that exhibits qualities of several different grades, our grading "will largely be judgment calls". We must "decide for (ourselves) on the percentage of the price adjustment.
So, let's judge and adjust!
This Doak glove exhibits enough qualities of both "good" and "excellent" grades that I would start with a baseline estimate somewhere between the two. "Very good" lies right in the middle. Since the glove does have overall eye-appeal, I'll further narrow that down to in-between "very good" and "excellent". Call it "very good- plus", if you will. With book values as a starting point, that puts us around $160.
Next, some rough adjustments. Knowing that: Doak gloves of this vintage sell well; the price guide was published a couple of years ago; the two patches usually bring a premium, and; having seen sales for similar gloves, I'm going to guess at a 25% adjustment. That brings us up to $200.
Now let's consider the box. It is in better than average condition and the price guide directs us to add 40% for a box of this age in "good" condition. I'm going to allow an extra 20% for such a nice box, for a total 60% over the glove-alone price. We are now at $320 for the combined set.
Even after all that, my gut instinct tells me that this glove and box combination might sell for a bit more than that. But I am comfortable with my starting point and confident that we have a good base value established.
As a comparrison, here is the glove in question:
Doak Glove With Box
Here is a similar glove that recently sold:
Similar Doak Glove & Box