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Good Reasons to Sell
Vintage Postcards, Mainly Topographical View Postcards, on eBay
They're among the most
collectable items and vintage postcards virtually sell
themselves. Vintage postcards
rank third most collectable item worldwide, just behind coins
and stamps. They’re not the bits of worthless paper many
people imagine, in fact some amazing prices can be fetched for
vintage postcards, notably on eBay, where items flea market
visitors consider overpriced at a few pennies can fetch double
figure, sometimes three figure sums.
* In the early days of postcard
collecting – called ‘deltiology’ – almost every family had its
own album, sometimes several. These heirlooms were
cherished and passed through the generations, postcards were
rarely destroyed or lost. Consequently many very early
postcards remain in undamaged condition today, usually still in
their original albums So you can buy hundreds or
thousands of postcards in just one day at specialist postcard
auctions and non-specialist sales, especially complete household
clearances from elderly deceased collectors. You can
actually buy hoards of postcards in just a few minutes, where
traders in other antiques and collectibles take weeks or months
to acquire stock to even contemplate the kind of money you'll
soon be making.
* Postcards are usually very
small and can be stored safely, close together, side by side in
boxes, boxes stacked high one on top of the other. When I
traded at postcard fairs, my entire vintage postcard stock, once
the biggest in the North of England, occupied a tiny corner of a
spare bedroom. Compare this to space needed by sellers of
larger, more fragile, unusually shaped antiques and collectibles
which need to be stored separately, surrounded by bubble wrap
and plastic chips, in varying size boxes which must be placed
separately on the floor, not stacked one above the other.
* Postcards are usually all the
same shape, roughly the same weight, making them extremely easy
to pack, very inexpensive to post. You won’t have to waste
time looking for boxes of varying size to pack and post your
products, as happens to eBayers selling oddly shaped items.
All you need are a few cardboard backed envelopes or you could
make your own from empty breakfast cereal boxes. Postcards
also fit into any local post box so Post Office visits are few
as happens for larger more fragile items that need to be
individually weighed and postage calculated. Be aware you
will have to visit the Post Office to Register or Record Deliver
your postcards which is usually quite rare.
* Because so few listing
details vary between postcards – usually just location, age,
publisher, postmark - you can create a template to suit every
postcard you ever list from now to forever, where only a few
details need changing each time.
* People who collect one
postcard, typically collect lots of postcards, so you could
develop a huge customer base of people who will watch your
listings closely and buy from you again.
* Listings are easy to keep
track of even over several months for items that go unsold first
time round. While people selling books and prints, pottery
and toys, must be continuously sorting through huge piles of
stock to find recently sold items which were listed months
before, you can organise the whole process using one of those
modern plastic postcard albums with acid-free plastic pockets
usually six to a page. Make very certain your pages are
acid-free and do not leave the album in a warm or moist
location, all cause damage including foxing which depreciates
postcards or ruins them completely. Place the first
postcard listed in the first pocket on the first page of the
album; second card goes into the second pocket (horizontally or
vertically, it doesn’t matter much). Now when auctions
end, starting first product, second product, and so on, you can
open the album and begin removing cards in order they are placed
in the album, leaving unsold cards in situ. Once all sold
cards are removed, move unsold cards forward to fill the empty
spaces. Now you can relist all the unsold items which will
continue selling in the exact same order they feature in your
album and you can begin adding new listings to spaces freed at
the back of the album. Cards that remain unsold after a
few listings can be moved forward, as before, and listed in bulk
with each album page having its own illustration in your
listing.
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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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