06-08-2021 10:16 PM
I was fooled into purchasing a real RC Gorman Lithograph. I told seller it looks like a cut out from a calendar the seller responded no its a cut out from a book. What's the difference its still fraud. Seller said it says it in notes and I must be new to ebay. No I m not and I never say notes. I can just go down to local Barnes & Noble bookstore and do the same. To you community people how cam ebay let this happen? Same seller has listed like 30 pictures. I say its fraud no matter if their is fine print some where.
06-08-2021 10:39 PM
...as a buyer, you are well protected from eBay Money Back Guarantee if whatever you bought is not authentic, not as described, it was fake, fraud, counterfeit...etc...even it doesn't meet your expectations...so...next step below...
...file an "Item Not as Described" case to get your money back...but please kindly return the unwanted item back to the seller...and don't worry that the returning shipping label will be provided from seller, you don't have to spend a penny on it...
06-08-2021 10:40 PM
What you are describing is a simple Not As Described dispute.
Go to the Resolution Centre (there's a link at the bottom of this page) and open the Dispute.
The seller will be required to send you return shipping.
When the tracking shows the delivery, you will be refunded.
If the seller refuses to send return shipping, he will still be required to refund.
Technically, most book illustrations are lithographs, as is your daily paper. Without knowing how much you paid for the print, if it sounds too good to be true, it usually is.
Read the descriptions in future. Most 'art' prints will be signed by the artist, and numbered, even when thousands of prints were made. The difference between the newspaper and the art print is the quality of the printing and of the paper.