hard to say what the value is. the value depends on a collector (or drinker) recognizing the producer and what it actually is and on not thinking it's counterfeit. there's no-name, unrecognizable tea out there, and there's also counterfeits of known tea. it also depends on the tea being stored properly all this time so that the flavor develops. it's not valuable unless it's good tea for drinking.
if it's a tea no one recognizes, maybe it could be sold to someone in person if the flavor is good, but it's hard to demonstrate that without the buyer sampling it. it's also hard to build confidence in the tea if it was not properly stored by someone who appreciates tea.
got any pics of it?
if that tea is real, it would be pretty valuable, i think. sounds like the original shu puerh brick. hard for me to imagine it's authentic. i don't have the expertise to authenticate it, but i think i've seen one before.
if it's a tea no one recognizes, maybe it could be sold to someone in person if the flavor is good, but it's hard to demonstrate that without the buyer sampling it. it's also hard to build confidence in the tea if it was not properly stored by someone who appreciates tea.
got any pics of it?
if that tea is real, it would be pretty valuable, i think. sounds like the original shu puerh brick. hard for me to imagine it's authentic. i don't have the expertise to authenticate it, but i think i've seen one before.
Statistics: Posted by pedant — Wed Oct 23, 2024 9:03 pm