I have a number of automatic searches on Ebay.  They go to my email when 
something I want comes up for auction.  It saves me a ton of time.
When I sell on Ebay, I put the lowest amount I will take for the item as the 
opening bid.  If it doesn't sell, so be it.
John W




________________________________
From: "jboh...@aol.com" <jboh...@aol.com>
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Sent: Fri, July 2, 2010 11:05:40 AM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Is there something wrong with this hobby?

Auctions any auction is a game of chance...if you didn't want to sell it low 
then you should have put a reserve on it. A card of that calibre would have 
sold 
easily at a fair/event for $150-200 however there are people canny enough to be 
on ebay and get a bargain and there are idiots on ebay who gloss over such 
items.

But an auction is a game of chance and when you have a low reserve you have no 
outcome but what it has sold for. 


Unless you do what other dealers do and if it is going to low you have a bidder 
you know bump the price up and if you or your buddy wins it you just pay the 
listing fees.




-----Original Message-----
From: Zeev Drach <lobb...@rogers.com>
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Sent: Fri, 2 Jul 2010 14:35
Subject: Re: [MOPO] Is there something wrong with this hobby?


Channing,
 
Yes, $11.50 for that card is a real bummer.  Yes, of course it’s worth a lot 
more, and you would have also gotten a lot more for it, had it not been on 
eBay.  

I would have paid a lot more for it, but I simply don’t have the time to look 
daily through the endless mounds of ebay auctions. I think that is true for a 
lot of people.  I go through some of Bruce’s and Rich’s auctions, just out of 
habit, and because I know them.  That’s about it.  Maybe a couple of other 
dealers as well, from time to time.  But the obsessive habit of sitting day in 
and day out and watching for bargains on ebay is long behind me.  Who’s got the 
time for it?  A few years ago it was still a novelty, but nobody can keep up 
with the sheer avalanche of posters and lobby cards heaped upon us daily via 
ebay and other on line auctions.
In other words, what I’m saying is there is so much stuff on ebay that people 
simply are tuning off. 

 
Zeev
 
 
 
From:MoPo List [mailto:mop...@listserv.american.edu] On Behalf Of 
channinglylethomson
Sent: Friday, July 02, 2010 12:53 AM
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: [MOPO] Is there something wrong with this hobby?

Is there something wrong with this hobby?

I ask this for the following reason.  Today, I had an auction closing on EBAY 
for an original 1941 lobby card -- a beautiful linen-paper portrait card of 
Rita 
Hayworth and Fred Astaire in a tuxedo from YOU WERE NEVER LOVELIER that I've 
had 
for years.  I started this auction low because I was conducting a sort of test. 
 I wanted to see if a card like this would reach its real value at auction on 
EBAY or not.  Well, unfortunately, the lobby card sold for a closing amount of 
$11.50.  15 years ago this card would have sold for between $125. and $200.  
You 
probably could have made a phone call and sold it for that. Now it sells for 
$11.50.  I posted the auction announcement on various sites including two 
separate ones on MOPO.  It ended up selling to a man in NYC for $11.50.

Now as you may imagine, I was disturbed that it sold for so little.  In the 
future, I will probably only start one of these low opening bid, Bruce 
Hershenson-style auctions if the piece is something like a lobby card or poster 
for a major 1950s science fiction film or a classic movie or obviously 
collectible poster or card.  I think a lobby card like this one is still of 
value despite changing tastes.  Maybe I'm wrong but I think there are still 
people who know who Rita Hayworth is and who Fred Astaire is and admire their 
work and their films.  However, since no one in MOPO found this worth bidding 
on, even if they could have gotten the card for as little as $12.50, maybe I'm 
all wrong.

Thoughts please?

Channing Thomson

P.S.  One other consideration -- I live in a major American city (San 
Francisco) 
where I routinely see elderly Chinese people digging through trash cans all 
over 
downtown trying to find cans or plastic bottles for recycling.  Sometimes they 
carry big plastic bags of these balanced on bamboo polls over their shoulders. 
 These are men and women who are often as old as 70 or 80.  You really can't go 
more than a block without seeing them digging through the trash.  Nobody seems 
to think there's anything wrong with this here but it disturbs me and makes me 
think we may actually be in a depression rather than just one the typical 
recessions.  The economy definitely BLOWS!
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