flea: (Default)
flea ([personal profile] flea) wrote2008-10-23 12:38 pm
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ebay is weird...

I've sold a few things on ebay now and then for a while now, and it's been perfectly easy and normal. Everything up to now has been items of children's clothing, either very inexpensive, or a little more expensive but something that I know exactly the market value of (often because I bought it on ebay in the first place).

This time I had two items that I started at $24.99 and expected might go as high as $50. One, a pair of Coach gloves, went for $100, and the other, a pair of sunglasses, went for $161! I just shipped them and I am fraught with anxiety about the whole thing. So much money! The gloves were a gift (like, 20 years ago, and I wore them perhaps twice; they are old-fashioned leather driving gloves), but I think $100 is a decent or under-estimation of the cost new, and probably okay for their current value. I know what the sunglasses cost new, though (hint: not $161), and while I feel I described them to the best of my knowledge, I still feel a little like I am defrauding the person who bought them.

I am going to be on tenterhooks until I get some feedback on these. And maybe even after that. How silly of me! It's because it is so much money, of course. Silly money.

[identity profile] lala-lisa.livejournal.com 2008-10-23 05:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Isn't that the point of an auction though? People pay what the item is worth to them. It could have little relation to the objective worth of the item.

(Anonymous) 2008-10-24 02:17 pm (UTC)(link)
I know I've overpaid for used items on ebay before. But it's because I wanted the item so damned badly and got caught up in a bidding war.

Don't feel bad. The object for you is to get as much money as you can for your items. You don't set the price--the bidders do.

The satisfaction of winning can overcome any remorse over the price.

[identity profile] cashmerepett.livejournal.com 2008-10-24 02:18 pm (UTC)(link)
that's me, by the way!