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Offline franksolich

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vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« on: September 24, 2011, 02:53:31 PM »
http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=403x4000

Oh my.

The vindictive primitive, the notorious re-seller.

It's the vindictive primitive who follows the philosophy of "You've got to be sharp--you've got to cheat the other guy before he cheats you."

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Vinca  (1000+ posts)      Sat Aug-27-11 02:04 PM
Original message
 
It's amazing what I considered my good find of the day - "new old," "Made in the U.S.A." bath towels. The elderly lady must have been cleaning out a storage closet because they still smelled of moth balls. The quality is so superior to the "Made Anywhere But the U.S.A." stuff you find now and for only a buck apiece, I was very happy. On the antiques/collectibles front . . . not so much. I was reduced to buying a Jim Morrison figurine in the original package, a Hummer model car and a couple of salt and pepper sets. It was grim.

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eleny  (1000+ posts)        Sat Aug-27-11 02:54 PM
Response to Original message
 
1. Years ago I got two sets of Made in the USA towels I liked

It was decades ago. The towels have lasted so long that I never broke out the second set. I did buy more towels in between so that's also why the plaid ones have lasted. But I'm tickled that I have a stash of nos Fieldcrests. The colors on these old towels are still vivid. The edges are raveling these days. I thought maybe I could zigzag the edges.

When I go thrifting I always look for USA towels in good shape but they're few and far between these days. You did good finding the towels.

The rest was slim pickings. I haven't had time to go to the thrift this summer. I ought to see what's up and report back. I've had the urge a few times but just couldn't get away.

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Paper Roses  (1000+ posts)      Sat Aug-27-11 03:09 PM
Response to Original message
 
2. Picked up at set of 12 gold rimmed wine glasses along with 6 of the same patten sherbet glasses. Don't know what they call these glasses today; who serves anything in these shallow wide glasses now?

Other than the glasses, slim pickings. Early Woolworth at best!

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eleny  (1000+ posts)        Sat Aug-27-11 03:26 PM
Response to Reply #2
 
3. "Early Woolworth...."

I have two sets of dishes that my mom bought back in the early '50s as gifts one Christmas for my grandmas. They were from Kresge (now K-Mart). Early Woolworth is okay!

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Paper Roses  (1000+ posts)      Sun Aug-28-11 03:06 PM
Response to Reply #3
 
4. I used to this phrase when I was in the business.

Many of my house calls produced lots of stuff that was just "stuff". My husband and I used to call it early Woolworth. Granted, there are many items sold by Woolworth that are now in the collectible category. What I meant, just because Granny bought the 'whatever', it is not necessarily antique. Lots of young folks think that, if Granny had it, it must be old.

Maybe I should change that to early Zayre or J.M Fields. Has not been a Woolworth in this area for at least 25 years.

My reference was to age and not to quality. Heck, I was brought up out of Woolworth.

I know my mother bought lots of stuff from their stores but I most vividly remember the underwear, socks(Buster Brown) and Tangee lipstick!

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demgrrrll  (1000+ posts)      Sun Aug-28-11 07:47 PM
Response to Reply #4
 
5. Tangee lipstick and Radio Girl Perfume

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grasswire  (1000+ posts)      Fri Sep-09-11 10:02 PM
Response to Original message
 
6. I found a huge lot of vintage towel sets once in an Amherst auction.

They were fantastic. I don't know what happened to them. I also bought a big lot of cotton pillowcases from the fifties -- pre-synthetic. Wow. They were just great.

I buy vintage pillowcases whenever I can find them at a reasonable price. Tomorrow morning I head out early to the Methodist rummage where every year I find really, really good linens at amazing cheap prices. Yayy!

Of course it is going to be a record high temperature in the nineties tomorrow, but I will be out real early. I'll be there half an hour early -- it's a parking lot sale, and they can't shut any early birds out.

And then the grasswire primitive reports back, the next day:

Quote
grasswire  (1000+ posts)      Sat Sep-10-11 05:52 PM
Response to Reply #6
 
7. so I was there at 8 a.m. for the 9 a.m. sale

Methodist parking lot. I roamed as they emptied boxes of donations onto the tables. Ack. No cotton pillowcases this year, durn it. But I did score. My third time 'round the lot, I saw a green planter. Hey! McCoy! #1603. Perfect condition. Fifty cents!

I picked up a tartan Thermos with liner intact and cup intact. I already have a round cooler in that pattern in storage. A worker rushed over to tell me that it is worth $40 on eBay. As if I didn't know.  $1.

Tablecloth: I saw blossoms and took it home for a dollar. When I got home, I see that it is cherry blossoms, and that it is pre-1940 with images of the U.S. Capitol, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial --- but no Jefferson Memorial, which started construction 1939. That will be fun to sell.

Big score in vintage clothes for the college sophomore who loves them! Some Methodist man's closet of top-quality clothing had been emptied. I got a seersucker sports jacket and a Pendleton madras sports jacket, NWT but vintage, for $2 each. And a dozen very cool vintage neckties, most of them made of Scottish lambswool but also some from the 1960s, skinny and retro. He's going to love that one of them is a tartan in his school colors.

Other finds: green wood-handled vintage kitchen tools at 25 cents each. Two dozen retro teak-handled dinner forks made in Germany, all for a buck.

A huge package of vintage handwork pattern books for ten cents. Probably forty books in all. I know they aren't worth much, but more than ten cents!

I passed on a couple of boxes of Christmas ornaments just because I had walked there and was getting too loaded down.

And I bought some really pretty pottery bowls for home.

It was a fine, fine day. Too bad I have to wait 'til next year for them to do it again.

Quote
Vinca  (1000+ posts)      Sat Sep-10-11 06:12 PM
Response to Reply #7
 
8. That sounds like a great sale! I missed the church sales in the spring because I was recovering from the hip replacement surgery, but I'm raring to go for the fall sales.

I went out to tag sales today. It didn't begin well. I drove a couple of towns away to an early sale because they had advertised Barbies. I hate Barbies, but anything for a buck. In any case, I was the first one there and said I'd come to see the Barbies and the woman told me she had included her phone number in the newspaper ad and someone called and bought them all yesterday. GRRRRR. I was so annoyed I didn't bother looking at the rest of her stuff and headed back to the town with the most sales.

I managed to find some decent vintage jewelry and what I think is a gold watch. Not a terribly good one, but I'll take it to the jeweler who buys gold for scrap and make a few dollars. I picked up a signed picture that I think is considered a digital painting. It seems to be associated with Stephen King's "Dark Tower" series somehow and that seems to have a bit of a cult following as far as I can tell. I'll need to do more research.

I also found a really nice Imperial Glass footed bowl with an underplate that is in a zodiac design and still has the old labels attached. Sadly, worth zilch on ebay, but I'll be able to sell it in the booth. Great weather over in Vermont today and fun sales!

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grasswire  (1000+ posts)      Sun Sep-11-11 06:16 PM
Response to Reply #8
 
9. I hate when sellers accomodate early birds!

Boo! Hiss!

Uh, well now, didn't the grasswire primitive just the day before brag about showing up an hour early at the church sale, so as to get the good stuff before other people, who followed the rules, did?

Quote
continuation of post above

I think I need to get a space in an antique mall again. There's one within walking distance of my new digs. It's a cool building, with an authentic old original working soda parlor inside. One of the stools is memorialized, because John F. Kennedy sat there on a campaign tour years ago.

Anyway, if I had a space, I could sell some of this stuff that has value under $20. Maybe. On the other hand, if I just sold 10 items a day on eBay that made $5 profit, that would be a nice egg. Of course I would have to list 20 to sell 10, probably.

I realized last night that I could have bought more of the vintage menswear and sold it on eBay or taken it to a resale shop and made some $ off it. Really top quality stuff, it was. But alas, I was on foot.

Meanwhile, this McCoy planter is calling my name. It wants to sit on my shelf with my other green pottery pieces.

I'd like to pick Vermont. Is there fall color yet? Still in the 90s here today.

Quote
Vinca  (1000+ posts)      Mon Sep-12-11 07:34 AM
Response to Reply #9
 
10. The leaves aren't turning yet in the south. Usually peak for foliage is the second week in October in our area. The shop I sell at in Brattleboro has been a bit slow given the floods and a serious Main Street fire earlier in the year, but I'm going to hang in there.

A bigger problem at the moment seems to be theft - especially of silver items. Someone had a small, locked case on a display at the back of the store. It was filled with sterling flatware. It turned up in the far reaches of the store, jimmied open and empty. I'm in an end-of-aisle booth near the cash register so I'm not as concerned, but I have recently lost a nice paperweight that was fairly valuable.

It makes you want to just put worthless crap in the booth.

Quote
grasswire  (1000+ posts)      Mon Sep-12-11 01:17 PM
Response to Reply #10
 
11. yeah, theft has really ruined the trade for many dealers and malls

I talk to a lot of people who say "I used to have a space at xxxx but the shoplifting ruined me."

I was really stupid about that. I had a basket full of WW2 money -- various occupied currencies. I put it in my space. It was gone overnight. Heh.

Oh and Brattleboro is nice! I had a good cuppa espresso there once in a little shop that was more like one in the Pacific Northwest. Real coffee! (I did not have a lot of luck finding espresso in N.E. -- that was about ten years ago, though. Did find some in NoHo and in Concord NH.)

Quote
Paper Roses  (1000+ posts)      Mon Sep-12-11 07:15 PM
Response to Reply #11

12. Shoplifting happens in shops too. A lot of smalls have walked out the door of my friends shop. Did for me too when I was in the biz. There is also the ticket switching that causes you to lose.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline BattleHymn

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #1 on: September 24, 2011, 03:07:25 PM »
It's always interesting how the DUmmies crow on about how they screwed someone over buying some crappy gewgaw, but on the same hand, expect others (corporations, successful people, etc.) to "pay their fair share". 

Where was the grasswire primitive's fair share, when she picked up a Thermos for $1 that she plans to flip on Ebay for until sums?  How is that "fair"?     

Offline shadeaux

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #2 on: September 24, 2011, 03:10:37 PM »
On every hoarder show, the hoarder is a thrift store, garage sale buyer. They think they're collectors too.   :whatever:

I've noticed there are a lot of nurses and teachers with hoarder tendencies.  Even the ones that pretend to be wealthy.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=439x1991418

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Warpy  (1000+ posts)        Fri Sep-23-11 01:42 PM

Response to Reply #4

6. I keep a floor lamp I picked out of the trash in Boston
 to remind me of how far I've come.

I furnished several apartments in Boston completely out of castoffs I repaired, rewired, painted, patched, or whatever.

Now I'm living in a place furnished mostly with thrift store finds, a relative lap of luxury.


Offline franksolich

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #3 on: September 24, 2011, 03:12:01 PM »
It's always interesting how the DUmmies crow on about how they screwed someone over buying some crappy gewgaw, but on the same hand, expect others (corporations, successful people, etc.) to "pay their fair share". 

Where was the grasswire primitive's fair share, when she picked up a Thermos for $1 that she plans to flip on Ebay for until sums?  How is that "fair"?     

Uh huh.

That's always been my main bitch about the vindictive primitive, the notorious re-seller.

She goes to a garage sale, and convinces the ignorant seller that something's only Dollar General stuff when in fact it's antique Wedgewood, and so pays peanuts for it.

Then when the vindictive primitive herself has a sale, she convinces the buyers that her Dollar General stuff is antique Wedgewood, and cackles and crows when the ignorant buyer pays for it as if it is.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline BattleHymn

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #4 on: September 24, 2011, 03:23:34 PM »
Uh huh.

That's always been my main bitch about the vindictive primitive, the notorious re-seller.

She goes to a garage sale, and convinces the ignorant seller that something's only Dollar General stuff when in fact it's antique Wedgewood, and so pays peanuts for it.

Then when the vindictive primitive herself has a sale, she convinces the buyers that her Dollar General stuff is antique Wedgewood, and cackles and crows when the ignorant buyer pays for it as if it is.

The spousal unit has upset at least a couple of flea market booth operators when they are stocking their booths, because she recognized their items as something she orders out of the books for Hobby Lobby.  At least one of them was misrepresenting their items as old, when they weren't.   

Offline franksolich

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #5 on: September 24, 2011, 03:27:33 PM »
The spousal unit has upset at least a couple of flea market booth operators when they are stocking their booths, because she recognized their items as something she orders out of the books for Hobby Lobby.  At least one of them was misrepresenting their items as old, when they weren't.

I've never been cheated by a flea market operator.....mostly because I don't do flea markets or garage sales.

I do only thrift stores and antique stores.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline GOBUCKS

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #6 on: September 24, 2011, 03:28:13 PM »
I'll bet grasswire was a sight, trundling back to her hovel, dragging a little red wagon stacked high with rummage sale junk,
visions of dazzling eBay riches swimming in her head.

Offline franksolich

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #7 on: September 24, 2011, 03:32:04 PM »
I'll bet grasswire was a sight, trundling back to her hovel, dragging a little red wagon stacked high with rummage sale junk, visions of dazzling eBay riches swimming in her head.

Not only that, but on a hot summer day (this campfire was lit in late August) all bundled, dressed, up as if it was deepest winter.  Two overcoats, the hat, gloves, snow boots, and the like.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline BattleHymn

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #8 on: September 24, 2011, 03:39:15 PM »
Not only that, but on a hot summer day (this campfire was lit in late August) all bundled, dressed, up as if it was deepest winter.  Two overcoats, the hat, gloves, snow boots, and the like.

The only thing missing from the picture Frank and GOBUCKS have thrown together is Julie Andrews in the background belting out "Feed The Birds" with lyrics reworked to "Eat My Pies".  We'd need the same fade-in that they used for the bird lady on Mary Poppins:  

Eat My Pies,
Red Wagon is full-
Trinkets, gewgaws, garbage to pull.
« Last Edit: September 24, 2011, 03:41:20 PM by BattleHymn »

Offline franksolich

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #9 on: September 24, 2011, 03:40:46 PM »
The only thing missing from the picture Frank and GOBUCKS have thrown together is Julie Andrews in the background belting out "Feed The Birds" with lyrics reworked to "Eat My Pies". 

Eat My Pies,
Red Wagon is full-
Trinkets, gewgaws, garbage to pull.


Damn, you're good, sir.

Awesome.
apres moi, le deluge

Milo Yiannopoulos "It has been obvious since 2016 that Trump carries an anointing of some kind. My American friends, are you so blind to reason, and deaf to Heaven? Can he do all this, and cannot get a crown? This man is your King. Coronate him, and watch every devil shriek, and every demon howl."

Offline Chris_

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #10 on: September 24, 2011, 03:42:07 PM »
I'm a little worried that you know Julie Andrews that well. :gay:
If you want to worship an orange pile of garbage with a reckless disregard for everything, get on down to Arbys & try our loaded curly fries.

Offline JohnnyReb

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #11 on: September 24, 2011, 04:16:05 PM »
Shoplift WAL-MART = good

Shoplift DUmmie junk = bad

DUmmie shoplifter shoplifting DUmmie junk =  :lmao:
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Offline Ballygrl

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #12 on: September 24, 2011, 04:27:28 PM »
I have my limit when it comes to used items and towels are one of them, i pictur people using them to clean their private areas.
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Offline bijou

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #13 on: September 24, 2011, 04:28:16 PM »
On every hoarder show, the hoarder is a thrift store, garage sale buyer. They think they're collectors too.   :whatever:

I've noticed there are a lot of nurses and teachers with hoarder tendencies.  Even the ones that pretend to be wealthy.

http://www.democraticunderground.com/discuss/duboard.php?az=view_all&address=439x1991418


I was just thinking that too. DU and Hoarders probably has quite a crossover in demographic terms.  :-)



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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #14 on: September 24, 2011, 04:44:49 PM »
I have my limit when it comes to used items and towels are one of them, i pictur people using them to clean their private areas.
So do the DUmmies. That's why they like 'em.

Offline Ballygrl

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #15 on: September 24, 2011, 05:25:44 PM »
Ewwwww!
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"The nation that couldn’t be conquered by foreign enemies has been conquered by its elected officials" odawg Free Republic in reference to the GOP Elites who are no difference than the Democrats

Offline Evil_Conservative

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #16 on: September 25, 2011, 04:26:51 AM »
I have my limit when it comes to used items and towels are one of them, i pictur people using them to clean their private areas.

Thank you!!!
You may call me Jessica or Jess.

Offline Mike B the Cajun

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #17 on: September 25, 2011, 07:03:37 AM »
I have my limit when it comes to used items and towels are one of them, i pictur people using them to clean their private areas.

Mind bleach please...    :hammer:
Don't get stuck on stupid...

I am of the CauCajun persuasion...  :-)

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #18 on: September 25, 2011, 08:47:54 AM »
I dislike yard sales. They make my job (mail) difficult as idiots have no problem blocking off entire streets of mailboxes to go pick though someone else's trash.

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #19 on: September 25, 2011, 12:54:41 PM »
I dislike yard sales. They make my job (mail) difficult as idiots have no problem blocking off entire streets of mailboxes to go pick though someone else's trash.
Go postal on 'em.

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #20 on: September 25, 2011, 02:52:00 PM »
First, the reason the DUches think that conservatives are so mean spirited is because the DUches are. Hammer, nail kind of thing.

Second, the textile industry was driven out of the USA by, you guessed it, the EPA. The EPA demanded changes to their factories with no thought to time or money involved. It was do as we say, spend horrendous amounts of money to upgrade to ridiculous standards in an unreasonable time. Today they are doing this to power producers. The textile manufacture's response was to build factories that were not hostile to them, some even friendly, while running their plants here until the drop dead date of about 18 months.

It's not the taxes that force business and jobs out of the USA, it is the unreasonable regulations and the uncompromising bureaucrats that enforce them.
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Offline JohnnyReb

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #21 on: September 25, 2011, 02:56:53 PM »
First, the reason the DUches think that conservatives are so mean spirited is because the DUches are. Hammer, nail kind of thing.

Second, the textile industry was driven out of the USA by, you guessed it, the EPA. The EPA demanded changes to their factories with no thought to time or money involved. It was do as we say, spend horrendous amounts of money to upgrade to ridiculous standards in an unreasonable time. Today they are doing this to power producers. The textile manufacture's response was to build factories that were not hostile to them, some even friendly, while running their plants here until the drop dead date of about 18 months.

It's not the taxes that force business and jobs out of the USA, it is the unreasonable regulations and the uncompromising bureaucrats that enforce them.

That was our largest employer here...took all the equipment and moved to Brazil now.

Several thousand jobs gone.
“The American people will never knowingly adopt socialism. But, under the name of ‘liberalism’, they will adopt every fragment of the socialist program, until one day America will be a socialist nation, without knowing how it happened.” - Norman Thomas, U.S. Socialist Party presidential candidate 1940, 1944 and 1948

"America is like a healthy body and its resistance is threefold: its patriotism, its morality, and its spiritual life. If we can undermine these three areas, America will collapse from within."  Stalin

Offline Celtic Rose

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #22 on: September 25, 2011, 03:14:52 PM »
Quote
grasswire  (1000+ posts)      Sat Sep-10-11 05:52 PM
Response to Reply #6
 
7. so I was there at 8 a.m. for the 9 a.m. sale

Methodist parking lot. I roamed as they emptied boxes of donations onto the tables. Ack. No cotton pillowcases this year, durn it. But I did score. My third time 'round the lot, I saw a green planter. Hey! McCoy! #1603. Perfect condition. Fifty cents!

I picked up a tartan Thermos with liner intact and cup intact. I already have a round cooler in that pattern in storage. A worker rushed over to tell me that it is worth $40 on eBay. As if I didn't know.  $1.

Tablecloth: I saw blossoms and took it home for a dollar. When I got home, I see that it is cherry blossoms, and that it is pre-1940 with images of the U.S. Capitol, the Washington Monument, the Lincoln Memorial --- but no Jefferson Memorial, which started construction 1939. That will be fun to sell.

Big score in vintage clothes for the college sophomore who loves them! Some Methodist man's closet of top-quality clothing had been emptied. I got a seersucker sports jacket and a Pendleton madras sports jacket, NWT but vintage, for $2 each. And a dozen very cool vintage neckties, most of them made of Scottish lambswool but also some from the 1960s, skinny and retro. He's going to love that one of them is a tartan in his school colors.

Other finds: green wood-handled vintage kitchen tools at 25 cents each. Two dozen retro teak-handled dinner forks made in Germany, all for a buck.

A huge package of vintage handwork pattern books for ten cents. Probably forty books in all. I know they aren't worth much, but more than ten cents!

I passed on a couple of boxes of Christmas ornaments just because I had walked there and was getting too loaded down.

And I bought some really pretty pottery bowls for home.

It was a fine, fine day. Too bad I have to wait 'til next year for them to do it again.

I helped with my church's rummage sale for the last couple of years, and I was truly amazed at how cheap people are!  People like Grasswire who act like it is their right to get cheap, rock bottom prices for items at an event that is trying to raise money for a church.  Things end up being hugely under priced because we know that people aren't willing to pay any more for them.  I remember we had a  tea set, beautiful tea pot with 6 cups and saucers from the 40's.  We had a priced at $4, and some lady offered 50 cents, I tried to haggle, and she wouldn't budge. 

I realize that people want a deal at a rummage sale, I enjoy finding a deal as much as anybody, and making offers for a group of items is part of fun of a rummage sale, but I wish that people would consider that we are actually trying to raise money and to keep in mind that if an item is somewhat valuable they shouldn't expect to get it practically free.

To be fair though, we had a number of things available for "best offer" pricing, and there were several very generous people who bought those things. 

Offline Texacon

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #23 on: September 25, 2011, 03:51:31 PM »
Not only that, but on a hot summer day (this campfire was lit in late August) all bundled, dressed, up as if it was deepest winter.  Two overcoats, the hat, gloves, snow boots, and the like.

Never considering the fact that she is using;

Corporate owned;

Phone lines
computer
online seller
electric company
etc...

To make her EVIL PROFIT!!!!

KC
  Build a man a fire and he'll be warm for a day.  Set a man on fire and he will be warm for the rest of his life.

*Stolen

Offline franksolich

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Re: vindictive primitive finds garage sales grim
« Reply #24 on: September 25, 2011, 06:49:29 PM »
I remember we had a  tea set, beautiful tea pot with 6 cups and saucers from the 40's.  We had a priced at $4, and some lady offered 50 cents, I tried to haggle, and she wouldn't budge.

That sounds like Vinca, the vindictive primitive (although she's in New England, not California).

And she probably (a) boasted about it on Skins's island and (b) turned around and sold it for $60-80, and boasted about that, too.

I swear, these primitives make greedy corporations look non-profit-minded in comparison.
apres moi, le deluge

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