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Kobe Bryant 2006-07 Exquisite Limited Logos Sale
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Kobe Bryant 2006-07 Exquisite Limited Logos Sale

Goldin sold a 2006-07 Exquisite Limited Logos Kobe Bryant BGS 8.5/10 auto for $62,355. A key data point for high-end Kobe game-used patch autos.

Jan 07, 20267 min read
2006-07 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection Limited Logos #LL-KB Kobe Bryant Signed Game-Used Patch Card (#36/50) - BGS NM-MT+ 8.5, Beckett 10

Sold Card

2006-07 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection Limited Logos #LL-KB Kobe Bryant Signed Game-Used Patch Card (#36/50) - BGS NM-MT+ 8.5, Beckett 10

Sale Price

$62,355.00

Platform

Goldin

Kobe Bryant’s 2006-07 Exquisite Limited Logos cards sit in a special tier of modern basketball grails, and one of them just changed hands at a strong number.

On January 4, 2026, Goldin closed a copy of the 2006-07 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection Limited Logos #LL-KB Kobe Bryant Signed Game-Used Patch Card, serial numbered 36/50, graded BGS NM-MT+ 8.5 with a Beckett 10 autograph. The final price was $62,355.

For collectors tracking high-end Kobe, Exquisite, or game-used patch autos, this is an important data point worth unpacking.

The card: 2006-07 Exquisite Limited Logos Kobe Bryant #LL-KB

Let’s start with the basics:

  • Player: Kobe Bryant, Los Angeles Lakers
  • Year: 2006-07 season
  • Set: 2006-07 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection – Limited Logos insert
  • Card number: #LL-KB
  • Serial numbering: Limited to 50 copies (this one is 36/50)
  • Autograph: On-card (Kobe signed directly on the card’s surface)
  • Memorabilia: Multicolor game-used patch window
  • Era: Mid-2000s “modern” premium, pre-ultra-modern print explosion
  • Grade: BGS 8.5 (NM-MT+), with a Beckett 10 autograph

While this is not a rookie card (Kobe’s rookies are from 1996-97), it is widely treated as a key issue for collectors who focus on his premium, game-used autograph content. Exquisite Limited Logos is one of the hobby’s flagship on-card auto/patch inserts from the 2000s.

Why Exquisite Limited Logos matters

Upper Deck’s Exquisite Collection, launched in 2003-04, is often credited with defining what a true “high-end” basketball card looks like:

  • Thick, premium stock
  • On-card autographs
  • Large, game-used patch windows
  • Low serial numbering

Within Exquisite, Limited Logos stands out because of its oversized patches paired with an on-card signature and relatively small print runs (typically /50). For star players like Kobe, LeBron, and Jordan, Limited Logos often sits on the same level as their Exquisite patch autos in terms of collector importance.

For Kobe specifically, early- and mid-2000s Exquisite patch autos are a core pillar of his high-end market. They act as reference points for how collectors value his non-rookie but still “prime era” cards.

Grading details: BGS 8.5 with a 10 auto

Beckett Grading Services (BGS) assigned this copy an overall 8.5 (NM-MT+), with a separate 10 grade for the autograph.

For cards like this, collectors often weigh:

  • Patch quality (number of colors, stitching, center display)
  • Autograph strength (streaking, fading, placement)
  • Eye appeal relative to the technical grade

An 8.5 on a thicker Exquisite patch auto is generally viewed as a solid, collector-grade copy—often more accessible than high-9s or 9.5s, while still well above the “beater” category. The Beckett 10 auto helps, signaling a clean, bold Kobe signature, which remains a big part of the appeal.

Market context and recent sales

Because Limited Logos cards are numbered to just 50 copies, they do not show up in every auction cycle. That makes “comps” (short for comparables—recent, similar sales that help give price context) less direct than with mass-produced base rookies.

Recent publicly reported sales of 2006-07 Exquisite Limited Logos Kobe Bryant cards and related issues show a few patterns:

  • Condition-sensitive: Strong 9 and 9.5 copies, especially with standout patches, can sell at a meaningful premium to 8/8.5 examples.
  • Patch and eye appeal premium: Multicolor, logo-heavy patches and particularly well-centered designs often outpace technically higher grades with weaker patches.
  • Set-wide strength: Limited Logos cards across stars (Kobe, LeBron, Jordan, Wade) have typically held collector interest because supply is fixed and appearances on major auction blocks are sporadic.

Within that framework, a sale at $62,355 for a BGS 8.5/10 auto sits in line with what you would expect of a serious, but not record-setting, result for a key Kobe Exquisite patch auto in today’s environment. Exact 2006-07 Limited Logos Kobe comps in the same grade and patch quality are thin, but this price is consistent with other high-end, numbered Kobe Exquisite auto-patch cards that have crossed major houses over the last few years.

In short: this is a healthy, market-confirming sale, rather than a shock outlier or a major step down.

Collector significance

There are several reasons this specific card format commands attention:

  1. Post-three-peat, prime-era Kobe
    The 2006-07 season sits squarely in Kobe’s prime, around his 81-point game era and before the later championship runs with Pau Gasol. Cards from this window are often favored by collectors who want Kobe in his most dominant scoring years.

  2. Game-used patch, not just player-worn
    The card’s memorabilia piece is described as game-used, which many collectors view as a step above generic “event-worn” or “player-worn” material.

  3. On-card autograph
    Kobe’s signature is directly on the card, not on a sticker. For many high-end collectors, that’s a non-negotiable feature—especially in Exquisite.

  4. Limited to 50 copies
    In the mid-2000s, a print run of 50 felt very scarce, especially for a worldwide player like Kobe. Even today, that scarcity holds up well compared to much larger ultra-modern print runs.

  5. Exquisite brand status
    Among modern and post-modern sets, Exquisite is still treated as a benchmark for luxury basketball cards. Limited Logos is one of its headline inserts, which adds a layer of historical importance.

Why this sale matters now

A few broader hobby threads make this sale worth watching:

  • Stable interest in Kobe’s premium cards
    Since Kobe’s passing, the market saw a sharp surge and then a cooling phase. Over time, results like this have helped define a more stable, long-term range for his top-tier cards. Sales of Exquisite patch autos are often used as reference points when collectors talk about the “true” market for high-end Kobe.

  • Healthy demand for mid-2000s grails
    While ultra-modern issues can be more volatile, mid-2000s Exquisite cards benefit from defined, low print runs and a well-understood place in hobby history. That structure tends to support more measured price movement.

  • Ongoing focus on game-used, on-card pieces
    Recent hobby conversations often emphasize game-used memorabilia and on-card autographs over sticker autos and generic patch cards. This card checks both boxes, which lines up with what many advanced collectors say they’re prioritizing.

What this means for collectors and small sellers

For collectors:

  • If you’re building a focused Kobe PC (personal collection), Exquisite Limited Logos is one of the lines that can anchor your high-end section alongside key rookies and championship-era cards.
  • An 8.5 with a 10 auto is often a “sweet spot” for collectors who prioritize patch and autograph quality over chasing every last grading subgrade.

For small sellers and hobbyists:

  • This sale reinforces that true scarcity plus brand equity (Exquisite + game-used + on-card auto) still finds deep-pocketed buyers.
  • When you look at your own inventory, it’s useful to separate cards that simply have a serial number from those that sit in a recognized, historically important insert line.

Takeaways from the Goldin sale

The January 4, 2026 Goldin auction result of $62,355 for a 2006-07 Upper Deck Exquisite Collection Limited Logos #LL-KB Kobe Bryant Signed Game-Used Patch Card (#36/50) in BGS 8.5 with a Beckett 10 autograph underscores a few key points:

  • Exquisite Limited Logos remains a cornerstone insert for serious Kobe collectors.
  • Mid-2000s, low-serial, on-card, game-used patch autos continue to hold a meaningful premium in the modern basketball market.
  • Eye appeal, patch quality, and autograph grade can matter as much as, or more than, the jump from an 8.5 to the next technical grade tier.

As always, this sale is one data point, not a prediction. But for anyone tracking high-end Kobe or the long-term status of Exquisite in the hobby, it’s a clear signal that the combination of game-used memorabilia, on-card ink, and established brand prestige still commands strong attention—and strong bids.