A lot of misperceptions in your post, I'm afraid.
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From a few minutes browsing, the Davo price reductions appear to be on Davo supplements only. The Palo discounts are real enough, but of course they're from already very high page prices (at least they're high prices to me!).
Not markedly higher than other hingeless album providers, e.g., Lindner, Safe, Lighthouse.
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The Palo pages I saw were sized exactly the same as Davo album pages. Of the major brands of stamp albums I'm familiar with -- Lighthouse, Schaubek, Lindner, Scott, etc. -- Davo has the largest pages. This may be because Palo is one of Davo's main U.S. distributors, so they may have an agreement to use Davo pages, but I don't know if that's true. I think that means you're going to need a Davo binder (and slipcase) to hold these pages. Or does Palo have its own binder sized for Davo pages?
No, Palo pages do not fit Davo binders. There is no connection at all between Davo and Palo other than the latter being a distributor for the former, and that relationship is only a recent one. Palo was making their own album pages long before they started distributing Davo products.
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One thing I don't much like about Palo (besides the high prices) is that they seem to feel that printing pages in color is a good idea. I don't understand this.
I don't like color pages myself, so it's a good thing that you can simply request black & white versions for the hingeless pages by putting a note in the order. As to why the black & white pages are not cheaper, it's because the printing is a tiny portion of the pages' actual cost, the majority being in the mounts and the labor/process to affix the mounts.
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Thanks for the heads up on this, but I imagine the vast majority of collectors looking at even these discounted prices are going to have to work a second job to afford many Palo albums.
And that is different from other hingeless pages how?
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I think their layouts have up to this point been the Steiner page layouts. Or am I wrong about that?
You're wrong about that.
The Palo albums are fully illustrated, whereas Steiner are not.
Your comments appear to be a diatribe about the price of hingeless pages, which would apply to all publishers, so I'm not sure why they're directed at Palo.
1. For collectors in the U.S., Palo pages are in Scott order, something that can be very useful if you are used to that sequencing.
2. Palo offers countries that no other publisher offers. They literally offer the entire world per Scott. For example, they are the only mainstream publisher to offer hingeless pages for early Mexico, early Hungary, etc. Where most publishers only cover modern issues, Palo makes pages for all countries from the beginning of their Scott listings.
3. You can buy individual replacement pages pro rata (slightly higher rate), so for example, if you wanted an extra hingeless page for Columbians or Trans Missippi to hold a parallel used, mint or set of proofs, you can do it.
4. They will do custom hingeless pages and layouts for you upon request (granted, at a cost).
5. As I mentioned in my original post, a sale of ANY kind on their own pages is unheard of, therefore worthy of posting.
I get that hingeless pages are expensive and not for everyone, but I'm not sure this thread is an appropriate place for the perceived merits, or lack thereof, of hingeless pages.