Elvis Presley concert and movie memorabilia comes in many forms, and can include very interesting and rare items valued by collectors.
Tickets, posters, programs, apparel, giftware, souvenirs, music and much more is to be found on the market from time to time. Much of this material is original and becoming increasingly hard to find.
Often these items are associated with a particular concert or movie release or performance, that has since become part of the story of the Elvis Presley legend. Pieces that have a particular story behind them are often more sought after by collectors.
If you're new here, you may want to subscribe to my RSS feed. Thanks for visiting!
With such a huge fan following for Elvis, it is inevitable that a thriving business has developed in Elvis Presley memorabilia and collectibles.
The Presley family runs a licensing and branding business built around this voracious demand for merchandise and souvenirs.
There seems to always be something new coming out with Elvis as the theme or brand, to meet the continuing insatiable demand of Elvis fans to own something linked to their rock idol.
- - UCN Inc. , innovator of on-demand contact center software for intelligent contact routing and agent improvement, has signed a one year, renewable agreement with Tennessee-based Limited Treasures for UCN inContact®, the award-winning software-as-a-service application for multi-site contact centers and remote workforces.
- - Portsmouth’s Art ‘Round Town galleries, openings on the first Friday of month, ellO Gallery, Nahcotta, Kennedy Studios, N.H. Art Association, Piscataqua Fine Art, and Three Graces Gallery.
- - On the center of the Vegas strip, the Harley-Davidson Café juts out onto the landscape, its gigantic motorcycle literally roaring through the restaurant’s facade. As the only official Harley restaurant in America, it’s a beacon to bikers world-wide.
- - More than 30 years after his death, Elvis Aron Presley continues to draw fans to his extensive music career. Aaron Webster of Mulkeytown has taken the 45s and record sleeves to another level, culminating in an exhibition that opened in The Buzz located on the Benton Public Square.
- - Elvis Presley died 31 years ago on Aug. 16, but his memory is alive and well in Gary Simmonds’ living room.
- - PICO RIVERA - It has been 31 years today since Elvis Presley died, but a Whittier man says he’ll always remember the rock icon as a friendly and polite young man - and a good customer.
- - Like other Elvis Presley fans across the world, Pam Edmond planned to light a candle Friday night in memory of the singer.
- - Margie Dennis will never forget Elvis Presley and has a house full of The King’s memorabilia to prove it. And she will pay a special remembrance to Presley today (Aug. 16), the 31st anniversary of his death.
- - Regular readers will know that I’m something of an Elvis fan. Okay, I don’t avidly collect his records and memorabilia like some sideburned, sixty-year-old plumber from Barnsley (not that I have anything against sixty-year-old plumber’s from Barnsley, you understand!), and I’m probably not about to make a pilgrimage to Graceland any time soon — but I have been listening to his music for most of my life and it still does the job it’s supposed to. So, with the 31st anniversary of his death only
- - Permalink Wordless Wednesday Wednesday August 13, 2008 The $100,000.+ Comic Strip More: Wordless Wednesdays on About Wordless Wednesday Posts
Published in 2007, Inside Graceland is a 112 page photographic tour through Elvis’ family home and his retreat from his crowds of followers, Graceland. The photographs of the Memphis mansion were taken mainly through the later years of Elvis’ life, in the 1970s. Around half of the photographs date from 1975 when Linda Thompson was Elvis girlfriend and guided a photographer through the mansion.
From these photographs and the accompanying text, fans can get a fresh insight into how Elvis lived at Graceland. There are photographs of the red Ludwig XV style rooms dating from 1974, through to the jungle room. Many of the photographs are from the private collection of Sherif Hanna, and are published here for the first time.
The story of Graceland is told by author Megan Murphy from the perspectives of those who lived and visited there when Elvis was in residence, like Linda Thompson, Sandi Miller, Larry Strickland and other well known friends of Elvis.