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  • pete240z

    Sept. 22, 2011 12:47 p.m. pete240z SuperDork

    There is a big 3 day garage sale event in my subdivision. So I go on a 2 mile exersise walk at lunch and bypass all the garage sales as it looks like a lot of car seats and kids clothes.

    Until I spot a few aluminum rims......chain saws.....ladders.......old cameras.......tool boxes.......old Schwinn bicycle........table FULL of tools.......so I tell myself to stop.

    Nothing is priced. "I know nothing" lady calls Harley shirt guy outside from his salad eating lunch in the kitchen.

    How much for these old Honda Motorcycle gauges? hmmmmm....I guess $20.

    How much for these four velocity stacks? hmmmmm....I guess $2 each.

    How much for the old Schwinn? hmmmmm....I guess $20.

    Me: You guys should price your stuff.....it will make your life easier.

  • Sept. 22, 2011 1:10 p.m. Joshua HalfDork

    Velocity stacks?

    You mean like, these guys?

  • ultraclyde

    Sept. 22, 2011 1:12 p.m. ultraclyde HalfDork

    Hey, if he keeps pricing stuff, let him. Sounds like good deals!

  • integraguy

    Sept. 22, 2011 1:17 p.m. integraguy SuperDork

    Sounds like that old gambit:

    "my wife wants this stuff gone, so we are having a yard sale...even tho I don't want it gone."

    My sister had a HUGE garage sale a few years ago in preparation for a move of 1200 miles. There was too much stuff to individually sticker, so we just grouped it by categories and if the bigger items needed higher than "average" prices, they were "segregated" and marked with prices.

    When my father goes to yard sales, like many people, he ignores the prices and "bids" what he thinks something is worth. If he's wrong, and needs to "re-bid", he does, if he REALLY wants to. Yard sale prices: really nothing more than suggestions, anyway.

  • Brett_Murphy

    Sept. 22, 2011 2:55 p.m. Brett_Murphy HalfDork

    It's common practice at garage sales not to price anything so that somebody will make an offer.

    It drives me crazy.

  • Sept. 22, 2011 3:27 p.m. spitfirebill SuperDork

    The first few garage sales we had, we priced most stuff. People still pick it up and ask, How much?

  • integraguy

    Sept. 22, 2011 3:44 p.m. integraguy SuperDork

    Ever see someone at a garage sale remove the price tag, or switch it with something waaay cheaper? Just asking, you see that in movies and on tv.

  • donalson

    Sept. 22, 2011 3:57 p.m. donalson SuperDork

    integraguy wrote:

    There was too much stuff to individually sticker, so we just grouped it by categories and if the bigger items needed higher than "average" prices, they were "segregated" and marked with prices.

    I like that idea...

    garage sales are fun... but I tend to never have cash and sleep to late on sat anyway... always amazed me how early they "open" and even more so when the garage salers would get there...

  • pete240z

    Sept. 22, 2011 4:02 p.m. pete240z SuperDork

    integraguy wrote:

    ........he ignores the prices and "bids" what he thinks something is worth. If he's wrong, and needs to "re-bid", he does, if he REALLY wants to.

    I like this strategy - Hey, will you take $5 for this old Schwinn?

  • Taiden

    Sept. 22, 2011 4:33 p.m. Taiden Dork

    Those old schwinns can be worth a bucketload. If it's an old original stingray in good shape I have seen them fetch $1200+.

    Also, I hate people who price like (excuse me) nazis.

    This one woman had an off the shelf, home depot, little bench vice. Price it at $40.

    I told her I'd give her $10 for it. It was the end of the day and they were moving the next.

    She said no, the price was $40.

    I said, $15.

    She said no, the price was $40.

    I said, "It's not worth $40 at a garage sale the day before you leave town"
    She said, "It's a very sturdy bench vice"
    I said, "It's also for sale"
    She stared at me.
    I thanked her for her time and left.

  • pete240z

    Sept. 22, 2011 4:50 p.m. pete240z SuperDork

    Joshua wrote:

    Velocity stacks?

    You mean like, these guys?

    More like these on ebay for $1.99 - just old ones.

    http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/NOS-VINTAGE-VELOCITY-STACKS-CB-500-/280743432112?pt...

  • corytate

    Sept. 22, 2011 8:41 p.m. corytate HalfDork

    pete240z wrote:

    Joshua wrote:

    Velocity stacks?

    You mean like, these guys?

    More like these on ebay for $1.99 - just old ones.

    http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/NOS-VINTAGE-VELOCITY-STACKS-CB-500-/280743432112?pt...

    hmmmm... make a reducer so you can run em on a challenge/lemons/chump/whatever car as itb's??

  • SkinnyG

    Sept. 22, 2011 10:01 p.m. SkinnyG HalfDork

    Last time we had a garage sale, we went like this:

    First 1/3 of day - $1 each

    Second 1/3 of day - $1/bag

    Third 1/3 of day - $1 all you can carry, and I'll help you carry it.

    The point of a garage sale is get rid of all the crap you've been hoarding.

  • carguy123

    Sept. 22, 2011 10:04 p.m. carguy123 SuperDork

    I've never seen a garage sale without price tags and if you're going to price by the bag why bother having a garage sale. It's too much work unless you are going to make some money.

  • pigeon

    Sept. 22, 2011 10:23 p.m. pigeon Dork

    After spending waaayyyy too much time on a garage sale years ago I did the math and figured out that donating and taking the tax write off I was money ahead vs the meager cash I got out of the sale, without even placing any value on my time. Haven't had one since.

  • carguy123

    Sept. 22, 2011 11:03 p.m. carguy123 SuperDork

    pigeon wrote:

    After spending waaayyyy too much time on a garage sale years ago I did the math and figured out that donating and taking the tax write off I was money ahead vs the meager cash I got out of the sale, without even placing any value on my time. Haven't had one since.

    EXACTLY!

    Make it worth your while or donate it.

    My kids used to run them for us for a split of the proceeds. They'd also bake brownies, cookies and sell drinks. They made out like a bandit.

  • novaderrik

    Sept. 22, 2011 11:30 p.m. novaderrik Dork

    my brother and his wife had a garage sale a couple of weekends ago.. their daughters (2 and 4) "helped" them set up- which really meant that they got to play with toys they haven't seen in over a year or more..

    they spent all day friday setting up and didn't really sell much of anything on saturday. i think they made $20. i told them they had the wrong pricing strategy- my idea was to get a bunch of boxes and sell the box for $5 and allow people to take as much as they could fit in the box, or $1 per item if they just had to have something but didn't want a box of junk.. they wound up giving a bunch of stuff to their crazy neighbor lady, and the rest is still piled up in the garage..

  • Sept. 23, 2011 5:02 a.m. petegossett SuperDork

    Since I started selling antiques/junk/etc. in my shop, I've been rummaging most weekends through the summers. I find I can get much better deals than I do by going to auctions, and I don't have to waste a whole day just to het outbid.

    I almost never pay asking price - whether it's marked or not - but I'll usually wait until I've picked everything I'm interested in before negotiating.

  • Appleseed

    Sept. 23, 2011 12:32 p.m. Appleseed SuperDork

    All I know is E-Bay sucked the fun out of all garage sales around here.

  • 4cylndrfury

    Sept. 23, 2011 12:41 p.m. 4cylndrfury SuperDork

    On the other hand, my FIL held a yard sale and sold $400 worth of triplicate tools he got at an estate sale - he spent $300 for a huge rolling workbox full of hand tools. Made $100 just on the repeat stuff. Then he got about another $200 for some random lawn care stuff he had laying around - he had a small yard, and therefore small tools, got a bigger yard, and bough bigger tools. THe old stuf made a little cash in the end. So $600 just on the first day. It just depends on the stuff you got...no one wants your old In Living Color VHS tapes, even if you have the ones where J-Lo was a fly girl. No one wants your kids broken Barbie van.

  • novaderrik

    Sept. 23, 2011 1:44 p.m. novaderrik Dork

    4cylndrfury wrote:

    On the other hand, my FIL held a yard sale and sold $400 worth of triplicate tools he got at an estate sale - he spent $300 for a huge rolling workbox full of hand tools. Made $100 just on the repeat stuff. Then he got about another $200 for some random lawn care stuff he had laying around - he had a small yard, and therefore small tools, got a bigger yard, and bough bigger tools. THe old stuf made a little cash in the end. So $600 just on the first day. It just depends on the stuff you got...no one wants your old In Living Color VHS tapes, even if you have the ones where J-Lo was a fly girl. No one wants your kids broken Barbie van.

    i'd love to have old In Living Color VHS tapes.. especially if they have a lot of Fire Marshall Bill and Homey the Clown..

 
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