Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/01/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]ATLANTA, Jan. 18 /PRNewswire/ -- In what is believed to be the largest- ever private sale of photographic equipment, KEH.com announced today that it has purchased a collection containing thousands of cameras and lenses from a California collector for more than $1.25 million. Included in the collection are hundreds of rare and unusual vintage cameras. Atlanta-based KEH, the largest used camera company in the world, acquired the coveted collection from Brooke Gabrielson, a 55-year-old Newport Beach, California, attorney and avid collector who has been buying photographic equipment since his college days. A regular bidder at some of the largest and most prestigious camera auctions in the world, Gabrielson amassed a collection that filled an entire room in his house and totaled more than 1,500 cameras, plus 3,000 lenses and accessories. The eclectic collection contains some very rare pieces, including one-of-a-kind camera prototypes and commemorative edition cameras and lenses, as well as current production cameras. ><Snip> Also in the extensive collection are a ONE-OF-A-KIND LEICA MD-22, A PROTOTYPE THAT WAS NEVER MANUFACTURED; a Rolleiflex that is one of only two produced (the other is in the Rolleiflex museum in Germany); and a novelty camera shaped like a pack of Marlboro cigarettes. KEH plans to sell the pieces of the collection primarily on its Web site, KEH.com, Mulherin says. ><Snip> How do you handle such a unique, valuable collection of cameras and prepare each item for sale? "Very carefully," explains Mulherin. The cameras and other photographic items have been turned over to KEH's technical department for careful examination, grading and cleaning. The Gabrielson collection is so large that four of the seven people in the department have been assigned to work with it. Because some of the equipment is so delicate, KEH restricts the number of people allowed to touch it. Wearing white cotton gloves to prevent any damage to the cameras, the technical staff is in the process of studying each piece in the collection, comparing it with the inventory list, grading it, and in some cases, combining pieces for sale together. For example, THE COLLECTION INCLUDES A LEICA M4P CAMERA PRODUCED IN 1983 TO COMMEMORATE LEICA'S 70TH ANNIVERSARY. IN A SEPARATE BOX THAT HAD NEVER BEEN OPENED, KEH DISCOVERED THREE COMMEMORATIVE LENSES TO ACCOMPANY THE CAMERA. KEH will package the camera and lenses together for sale. ><Snip> As for Gabrielson, he says he doesn't miss his roomful of cameras. However, he admits that on the day he sold the collection to KEH he strolled into a store in Carmel and bought another camera. from the newswires I made some of the stuff in UPPERCASE Mark Rabiner