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Selling fine art

I recently listed two fine art original pieces on eBay.  The same buyer, made offers for $450 more than I was asking.  

 

I told the buyer the transaction must go through eBay.  Am I correct?

Is this buyer legit?

Message 1 of 23
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22 REPLIES 22

Re: Selling fine art

My kneejerk reaction... why pay $450 more than your price? Yes, it sounds like a scam. Don't accept the offer, don't send messages to the email address, don't text or call this 'buyer'. Keep all business on eBay. Good luck.

Message 2 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

You shouldn't be listing someone's contact information.

 

Self report your post.

Message 3 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

Never contact anyone off EBAY....their are many scammers and offering MORE than asking price is a tipoff.

Message 4 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

Big fat scam..and an old one to boot. They will send you a fake Paypal invoice that they have paid.



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“Never pick a fight with an ugly person. They don’t have anything to lose.” ~Robin Williams
Message 5 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

A message that says "I am interested in your item, kindly text me", an offer greater than your buy it now price, or a request for a gift card is generally the start of a scam where the scammer winds up sending a phony PayPal email that makes it look like the seller has received a payment when none has actually been received. Scammers like to target new sellers, particularly those selling expensive items.

 

Sending contact information (text or email) prior to a transaction is a violation of eBay policy; this policy is designed to protect honest buyers and sellers from this sort of thing, and to prevent off-eBay sales.

 

Never buy a gift card for anyone unless you are giving a gift.

 

As a seller you should always check your PayPal account directly (not following a link in an email) to see if you have actually been paid prior to shipping. If an actual buyer does not send an actual payment, file an unpaid item dispute and go through that process to get your fees back and to give the "buyer" a strike -- and set your buying requirement to reject bids from users with two or more strikes.

 

eBay will likely remove the scammer's account shortly, but the scammer will just create a new one or hijack an old one and continue sending scam offers and messages. Sellers must remain wary of any user that wants the seller to violate eBay policy.

 

You can avoid many common scams by listing your item for a fixed price with immediate payment required and by not accepting any offers. That way the buyer must complete checkout and actually pay in order to proceed.

Message 6 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

Why do you have a book description on that Native American painting?



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“Never pick a fight with an ugly person. They don’t have anything to lose.” ~Robin Williams
Message 7 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

Hi, board policy doesn’t allow us to post contact info for ourselves or our trading partners. It is likely your post may get deleted or edited. It isn't necessary for posters to see that info to know you are dealing with a scammer. So glad you came here to ask. Your gut instincts are working fine—this is a scam attempt.

Message 8 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art


@bonjourami wrote:

Why do you have a book description on that Native American painting?


Keyword spamming?  Beats me.  I don't even know if it's a painting that is for sale, or a a book about painting, or paints, or what.  It it's a painting, no one is going to pay $2500 for it without knowing even the medium, much less any other details about it.  It's a bizarre listing.  

Message 9 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art


@maxine*j wrote:

I don't even know if it's a painting that is for sale, or a a book about painting, or paints, or what.  It it's a painting, no one is going to pay $2500 for it without knowing even the medium, much less any other details about it.  It's a bizarre listing.  

And the OP misspelled the names of the artists on both the active listing and the sold listing.

 

 

Message 10 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

@think--83 

  

             


@think--83 wrote:

I recently listed two fine art original pieces on eBay.  The same buyer, made offers for $450 more than I was asking.  

 

I told the buyer the transaction must go through eBay.  Am I correct?

Is this buyer legit?


Your answer is in order..Yes and No. 

     You really need to fix your listings esp that $2500 one. Look at that description, look at the title, look at the ONE photo. It's no wonder you have scammers crawling all over you like ticks on a bobcat. You did well identifing scammers now put some of that knowledge into your listings! Best to you.

Message 11 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art


@bonjourami wrote:

Why do you have a book description on that Native American painting?


It appears to be a Catalog Listing, used by many, that's gone south and doesn't fit the item.

 

@think--83  - Your listing needs to be redone. It's not clear what's for sale, if it's a print or original, what size and so on. The artist name should be Buchfink...not Buckfink. That name also belongs in the title.



VintageCarMagazines

Message 12 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

Offers to pay more than the price?  I suppose it could be a buyer that has not learned how to bargain and got it backward.   NOPE it's a SCAMMER!!  

Message 13 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art

Is everyone missing the fact that these are listed as AUCTIONS? Not buy it now?

 

No, someone offering more than your starting price on an auction is not evidence of a scam. It would be if they offered more than the BIN price of a fixed price listing. The potential bidder might think that it will sell for way more than they are willing to bid.

 

Message 14 of 23
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Re: Selling fine art



The same buyer, made offers for $450 more than I was asking.

There is no need for you take further action when this happens. Just ignore without responding. These "offers" are intended to serve two functions simultaneously:

 

(a) to appeal to your greed;  and 

(b) to accomplish (a) without having to actually pay you anything

 

I told the buyer the transaction must go through eBay.  Am I correct?

Yes, but all you are doing is engaging further with a scammer. He knows how eBay works; that is why he made an offer instead of just buying the item. 

 

Is this buyer legit?

Almost certainly not. 

Message 15 of 23
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