The The Price of Quality Is Being Reduced Introducing exciting perspectives Never. before vertical blinds sculpted into dramatic profiles - Diamonds, Sea waves, A tropical forest. Plus other exciting profiles you must see to believe. Or choose from any one of our Exclusively Louver Drape vertical blinds. ALL ON SALE FOR A LIMITED TIME and only from your authorized Louver Drape Dealer SP . 50%-70% OFF • Vertical Blinds • Levolor Blinds • Pleated Shade • Wood Blinds 21728 W. Eleven Mile Rd. Harvard Row Mall Southfield, MI 48076 Free Professional Measure at No Obligation Free in Home Design Consulinq Hours: Mon.-Sat. 10-5 Thursday 10-8 352-8622 New Rochester Hills 651.5009 For insurance call SY WARSHAWSKY, C.L.U. See me for home, car, life and health insurance. 626-2652 Like a good neighbor. State Farm is there. HOME to ensure that the buyer purchases a print that is worth the money. But that doesn't mean that it is an invest- ment. Says one art dealer, "In my opinion, the print market is extreme- ly misleading, from the standpoint of investment, to a naive buyer. Many, many works of art are falsely inflated to the retail customer. For example, publishers may say that the price for a print has increased because of de- mand. However, despite this pub- lished price, the likelihood of a customer being able to sell the piece at a profit is very slim." INVESTING ALL NAME BRANDS 24 PICTURE PERFECT 6668 Orchard Lake Road In the West Bloomfield Shopping Plaza W. Bloomfield 48033 There is a difference between be- ing a collector and being an investor. An investor only buys work that will go up in value and then turns around and sells it. A collector buys a piece because he really likes it and hopes that it will go up in value. There must be an established retail market for a print in order for it to be considered an investment. If you can't turn around and sell a work to a gallery, it is not an investment. If you buy Picassos, Chagalls, Miros — ar- tists who are established in the tradi- tional market and who can be found in major museums throughout the world, it's important to remember that even these artists did many pieces that are not desirable. So there are works on the market by well known artists that are not good investments. Several gallery owners offered tips on acquiring prints: • Study print collections to get a basic education. For example, if you are interested in city views, you should visit the institutional collections around the city. In many cases, these institutions were the original subscrib- ers who purchased the prints when they were produced, and they have complete sets of prints. • Go to the library and research the artist you're interested in. Check the auction reports or other price in- dexes and see if there was anything recently sold by the artist so you can make price comparisons. • Consult established sources of information including auction cat- alogs and "catalogues raisonnes," which are comprehensive, well an-