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Five Scams and Mistakes
to Avoid When Buying Vintage Postcards at Auction to Resell on
eBay
There’s a trick played
at offline auction which also works well online and it’s
designed to con busy people out of their cash for albums of
vintage postcards which are potentially 95% worthless. At
any busy offline auction, with say three or four hundred vintage
postcard lots and just a few hours viewing time, many potential
bidders will view just a few pages of most vintage postcard
albums, make a quick buying decision, then move to study another
lot.
The con is where vendors
include good quality vintage postcards in those first few pages
and pack the rest with low value or even worthless cards.
Much the same happens on eBay and other online sources and in
printed catalogues for many offline and online sales, where the
first few pages of an album will be photographed in all their
glory and the rest – the grot – left to your imagination.
Be very careful, check thoroughly at online and offline auction.
Ask questions and, if in doubt, it’s always better to study a
handful of albums thoroughly and bid on these and pass on albums
you haven’t studied from start to finish.
Here are other scams and
mistakes you should take care to avoid:
* Old fashioned
albums designed for inserting postcard corners into cut-out
hinges can present a major and very unexpected problem for
novice postcard buyers. The problem can be caused
innocently by past owners or deliberately by recent sellers.
Postcards newly acquired
by our Victorian ancestors were often manoeuvred and sometimes
manhandled as they were placed beneath hinges, and corners often
got cracked or creased in the process. So today hundreds
of cards may look in spectacular condition in an album that has
not been touched for decades but in fact many cracked corners
lie hidden and torn beneath those hinges.
*
Try always to attend auctions in person, not only to view but
also to bid. Opinions vary and it's not unusual for an
auctioneer to describe something as 'old' in the catalogue which
in collecting terms is better called 'modern'. You can't
always afford to bid on items you haven't viewed, and you must
not trust another person's opinion no matter how qualified that
person is.
* At
offline auction try to check lots immediately before bidding
starts. This is because lots are sometimes tampered with,
often mistakenly, usually deliberately, and what you viewed
yesterday may be totally unlike the lots you'll bid on today.
You’ll often find postcards you viewed yesterday have since been
stolen or damaged. More often postcards are moved between
lots so an album that contained rubbish yesterday is packed with
high value collectibles today, Consequently that
previously rubbish album will go for next to nothing, and those
once quality albums, now worthless junk, will be a big
disappointment to someone who viewed yesterday and buys today.
In cases like this you must contact the auctioneer right away,
voice your concerns, suggest you should not be charged for the
item. Most will agree if the lot no longer compares to
their catalogue description but it’s vitally important you check
at least some of the expected contents while auction staff are
present and can see the problem first hand.
Sometimes
high price items are concealed in old fashioned hinged albums
behind less valuable postcards so all most people see is rubbish
and low value pieces and bids will be low. It’s hard to
spot this sort of scam unless you look very closely. It
usually happens in albums packed with low value cards, which in
itself means this is unlikely to be a genuine collection, namely
one that was compiled decades ago. That’s because
virtually all genuine early collections contain at least a few
better specimens; they will also reveal little difference in
recipient and delivery address. An album with lots of
grot, lots of recipients, lots of delivery addresses, is more
likely to be a dealer’s rubbish stock, placed in a vintage album
to look like a genuine collection and tempt inexperienced
bidders. Those concealed high price postcards have
been moved from better auction lots and replaced behind poor
quality cards in low interest albums. The album will fetch
little and might include several high price gems.
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Avril Harper is
a triple eBay PowerSeller and author of BANK BIG PROFITS
SELLING VINTAGE TOPOGRAPHICAL VIEW POSTCARDS ON
EBAY which you can read about at:
http://www.sellpostcardsonebay.com and MAKE MONEY
TEARING UP OLD BOOKS
AND MAGAZINES
AND SELLING THEM ON EBAY
which you can read about at:
http://www.magstoriches.com
She has
produced a free guide - 103 POWERSELLER TIPS - which you
can download with other freely distributable reports and eBooks
at:
http://www.avrilharper.com
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