11-26-2019 11:58 AM - edited 11-26-2019 11:59 AM
...at least have a decent photo. I had a 15 year old keychain camera that took better pictures than this.
Seller's description (not verbatim) - buyer will be buying based on the photos. ::sigh:: All 12 photos are like this.
Sorry, but as a buyer it's frustrating. I have money, I WANT TO BUY, but I can't if you're not gonna show me what you have! And it's happening more and more...and I'm spending less and less.
11-26-2019 01:41 PM
Wow, this isn't just a bad picture. There is something about it. I can't look at it for more than 2 seconds without my head starting to hurt, like I am trying on some one else's glasses. I think this seller has actually weaponized poor ebay listings.
11-26-2019 02:31 PM
11-26-2019 03:13 PM - edited 11-26-2019 03:14 PM
@jersey..authentix wrote:You certainly do see some pretty bad Photos. Beats me why you wouldn't want to show what you are selling in the best format possible.
Since laziness has been brought up. What about those lazy buyers that never read descriptions and buy based on Pictures.
I had a listing stated custom jersey , stated the company, very clearly explained , but yet the buyer purchases and claim fake on the return. Would have taken nothing to read. Wasn't hidden.
Two sides of the exact same laziness and irresponsibility coin. Neither party does their due diligence. One fails when it comes to taking responsibility when making their listing, the other fails to take responsibility when it comes to buying a listing.
Any seller can throw up a listing - a responsible seller takes pride in their listing and has clear pictures, a clear description, uses correct item specifics and has a non-threatening TOS.
Any buyer can buy a listing - a responsible buyer reads the description, item specifics and any seller TOS, looks at the photos and makes a responsible purchase based on the given information. And...a good buyer will not buy from a lazy, visibly irresponsible seller. (at least this good buyer won't.)
Two sides of the same lazy and irresponsible coin.
11-26-2019 03:30 PM
I come across a seller a few weeks ago and almost all their photos were blurry or so dark, you couldn't tell what they were selling.
I thought they were new, but no, they've been selling awhile (and doing pretty good) with a couple thousand items.
Their description was the title and see images.
11-26-2019 03:42 PM
11-26-2019 04:10 PM
I find this in gold and silver coin listings too often, here's a couple of examples. They are not enlarged. The sellers must be proud!
11-26-2019 04:45 PM
@wesk_36 wrote:I find this in gold and silver coin listings too often, here's a couple of examples. They are not enlarged. The sellers must be proud!
Oh wow...that one on the left looks like a greasy pizza.
11-26-2019 04:49 PM
@southern*sweet*tea wrote:
@wesk_36 wrote:I find this in gold and silver coin listings too often, here's a couple of examples. They are not enlarged. The sellers must be proud!
Oh wow...that one on the left looks like a greasy pizza.
I was thinking it looked like quiche.
11-26-2019 07:04 PM
I encountered one of those yesterday while doing some searching for Christmas presents for friends. Only one photo, dark and a bit blurry, and you couldn't even zoom in on it at all.
Why do these sellers think they're going to get sales if they can't even be bothered to put in the effort to do the bare minimum in terms of making their listings presentable/appealing? There's zero excuse for it in this day and age of cell phones that take perfectly good photos. And the worst part was that this was a seller who had a couple hundred items listed, so it wasn't even like they were just some Joe cleaning out their closet!
11-26-2019 07:21 PM
@debosm-47 wrote:
I looks like there is oil on the lens
My thoughts too. I see a lot of what I assume are smartphone photos that must have fingerprint grease all over the lens. Granted, it's easy to do, and I've taken one or two shots that way that came out smeary as a result, but when I look at the first photo and see that, it doesn't take two seconds to just wipe the lens with a shirtsleeve and get back to nice sharp photos after that.
11-27-2019 01:38 AM
I see it all the time. Listings that have NO description (other than the title). LOL
11-27-2019 04:50 AM
Agree with everyone.............but to add to the insult.........the stuff SELLS.......that's what aggravates me.......looking in solds and finding this kind of thing...........little, no description, lousy pictures, etc....sigh
11-27-2019 05:55 AM - edited 11-27-2019 05:56 AM
I was intersted in a Humphrey Bogart DVD box set. It had a generic picture and absolutely no description at all! So I sent the seller a question asking what movies and how many. Here is his reply that made no sense at all. Obviously his reply is generic as well.
11-27-2019 06:18 AM
"the stuff SELLS..." usually because it's the cheapest
to me the pro-looking photos are more questionable
than the fuzzy "bad" photos
because at least you know the bad photos are NOT
Cheap IMPORTED JUNK from you-know-where 😉
11-27-2019 06:57 AM
@pink.fish.rule wrote:
or at least get a cheap tripod.
Heck, if you want to keep it on the cheap you don't even need to get a tripod. Put a bag of rice or beans on top of a dresser or a stack of boxes and nestle your digi cam in there to keep it steady. It's not hard to do and I can't believe people think it's acceptable to use these awful photos. It brings down the whole venue. I guess they keep doing it because as dhbooks pointed out - people buy regardless.