06-18-2018 10:18 AM
It's not mine; I put a bid on it and it went for about 3x what I was willing to pay. There are some beads in there that look like old glass and stripped pearls. Old fashioned bidding war? The only thing I can think of is two people wanted something "just like Grandma's" and they didn't back down.
https://www.ebay.com/itm/-/382478390910?nordt=true&rt=nc&_trksid=p2047675.l10137
06-18-2018 10:33 AM
16 pieces for $180 is about $11 per piece. Overall it looks like a quality lot at a quality price. The 5 Art Deco brooches are really eye catching and could command $50 each. The guilloche pins about $20 each. Maybe one of the brooches are a known design, like KTF Trifari.
06-18-2018 10:47 AM
I hope the buyer got what they paid for. I can't help thinking I'd get maybe half that if I tried to resell. Maybe.
06-18-2018 11:03 AM
06-18-2018 11:34 AM
06-19-2018 05:30 AM
That is a lot for a wear/repair lot!
06-19-2018 07:56 AM
If I listed a lot like that one I'd probably be lucky to get $25. 🙂
06-20-2018 06:36 AM
I have boxes and boxes of unsold jewelry and really getting ready to list a few lots just not sure since I never get but a starting bid. I spread my lot out so buyers really get a good look not sure if I should go by color, only brooches, maybe just necklaces or just a lot of earrings. Really like some ideas or suggestions. Was going to start a new thread with that question but saw this post.
06-20-2018 07:11 AM
I have never really had much luck with larger lots, but smaller lots seem to do fairly well. I seperate everything into lots of 20 pairs earrings, 10 necklaces, brooches, or bracelets, and start them low. I start the earrings at 9.99 and then the rest start around 5.99. I have had some go for the bottom price, but then have had some get bid up higher than I thought they would. It seems to even out to me. And a benefit of keeping the lots smaller is you can offer cheaper shipping options, which I think will help with the final sale. It is always a risk starting things low, but I feel I have had more luck with things getting bid up than if I start higher.
I think I may even start using that as my pricing guide for individual items as well. Start them high for one auction round then if no one bites, drop it to .99 for the second round. At least I will sell everything then! 😄
06-20-2018 07:27 AM
Thank you for your advice. I do offer free shipping in my listings so I have to include that in my start price. I was advised by someone at my bank (he sells on EBay) that offering free shipping increases sales since buyers don't need to figure in the shipping cost when they bid. My sales did increase and big stores and "A" all offer free shipping. Next week I really need to list some lots. Maybe I wil put some in bowls just in a pile and then some lots spread out and see how that works. Getting back to this discussion on why that lot went so high. WOW all it takes is 2 bidders who want the same item. I think that is the case here.
06-20-2018 04:17 PM
06-20-2018 04:25 PM - edited 06-20-2018 04:25 PM
I don't know, it is so pale and evenly colored, and a bit shiny. Maybe a couple of buyers took a chance it is?
06-20-2018 06:15 PM
The bottom right looks like it might be a better quality jade bead. The coloring and swirling is right, the beads themselves are slightly off-round, and the knots indicate an older item. I wouldn't be surprised if the box clasp was sterling. I have an 18k and fine green nephrite jade necklace here that appraised at $1,800, and the buyer may have taken a chance on it being nephrite.
I don't think the white ones at the top right are angel skin coral. They're too uniform in coloring.
06-20-2018 07:08 PM
I was getting ready to post this lot until I started reading this thread... now I am not sure.... can someone look at these necklaces for me and let me know.... if I have angel skin coral or some other kind of coral.... the necklace is very pretty cold to the touch and has carving and maybe fresh water pearls. TIA
06-20-2018 07:50 PM - edited 06-20-2018 07:53 PM
Patty, is there any way you can shoot a tight close-up of some of the beads and the thingy that holds the strands together? Line up the larger beads together so you get a shot of most of them together. The bigger the file the better -- just select "medium" size when you upload it and it will be fine. If the photo is big enough (at least 1000 pixels or more) one or more of us can enlarge the photo enough to see details. ... and I hate to say it but the better the focus the better will be the enlarged photo. -- The photos you posted are fine, not meaning to sound critical.
Looks interesting!
A.