Home › Forums › What Sold! › What Sells On eBay: Counter checks, Glass blocks, Wall clock, Hiking shoes
- This topic has 2 replies, 3 voices, and was last updated 3 years, 6 months ago by
Temudgin.
-
AuthorPosts
-
-
10/01/2022 at 8:19 pm #97896
Post your What Sold video in the forum>>[See the full post at: What Sells On eBay: Counter checks, Glass blocks, Wall clock, Hiking shoes]
-
10/02/2022 at 9:56 pm #97902
Steve – I had no idea of those counter checks. I’ll have to ask my parents if they remember doing that. They would have been in school or college in the 50s, so they might not have ever used one.
Not a great week for sales, but here are a few:
I tried using a epilator when they came out, but they were too painful for me. Apparently, not everyone feels that way. This vintage one sold for $33.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/185593938553
I’m mentioning this antique bowl not so much for its uniqueness, but because of my kinda weird (maybe novice) buyer. She asked for a price to ship this and a ring, so I looked at the address in France and came up with a $35.20 price using Pirate Ship simple export rate plus insurance. The address had a company name that looked like a freight forwarding place, no big deal. She tried to pay, but was having problems. She sent me a screenshot to show me her issue, and she was trying to ship it to an address in Florida. Who doesn’t know that $35 is a bit much to ship a 4 pound item along the east coast? So, I explained the problem, she set the address to the correct one, and I was able to give her an $11.70 shipping cost. She told me a story about the French address being her sister’s, and then she asked me not to put an invoice in the box. Some sellers are weary of freight shippers, so she didn’t me to know.
-
10/04/2022 at 1:49 pm #97940
Last week I only sold two items (other than a scarf that I could not find and had to cancel). This US Army Vietnam War camouflage slant pocket jacket with an 82nd Airborne Division patch is sadly the last of a lot of these shirts that I purchased a while back for $26 each. The others sold quickly and for more money, but this one took over a year to go for $75 plus shipping.
This one had an unusual variation with the officer’s rank tabs sewn underneath the collar instead of on the outside. This was done in the hopes of foiling enemy snipers who would be looking for an officer to take out, but would leave the rank available if it needed to be shown to someone. It’s rarely seen, and a bit silly actually. Some LT out in the jungle in a combat zone feels he has to able to flip up his collar to show someone he’s the boss? I think most officers if they were worried about getting sniped would have left sew-on rank off completely and simply put on subdued (black) pin-on rank if they went somewhere where they wanted or needed to have it on the uniform. The whole point of subdued sew-on rank was that it would blend in with the camouflage uniform at any distance so it was intended to be worn visible in the field. https://www.ebay.com/itm/275447628245
The other item sold was a Bvlgari makeup bag or clutch that was given out as a promotion and ended up in the family donation box. It’s been up for a couple years and sold for $19 plus shipping. https://www.ebay.com/itm/275432770469
Here are a couple interesting sales from earlier in the summer. This consignment challenge coin from USS HOPPER, a US Navy guided missile destroyer, commanded a premium because it is personalized by name from a specific Commanding Officer. Some ship’s coins will simply be identified to the ship with front and back design, some will have a design indicating it is from the Commanding Officer but without a name, and some like this one will have a specific officer’s name. The latter are usually rare because a CO can only expect an 18-month tour, and it’s not unusual for it to be shortened from that. It used to be longer but not by much. It sold for $39 plus shipping but the buyer used a 15% off coupon.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/275186550058This 1960’s Afghanistan travel booklet was out of my in-laws’ estate. It was put out by the Royal Afghan Embassy in London but written in a travelogue style which makes it a fascinating look at what a westerner would experience in their travels there at the time when the Afghan government was attempting to modernize the country and attract tourists. It was in pretty bad shape and sold for $22 plus shipping on a best offer.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/275163749027
-
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.