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I think the professionals pull most of it. In our shop, except for an occasional cross in the jewelry case, we never sold any. I have always though religious things were too personal to sell. BTW, I no longer go to the professionally run sales around here. There is a lot of "who you know" stuff going on. There may be very good operators of these sales but they tend to price a $20.00 item for $20.00. Where is the motivation.
I'd rather hit the church fairs, flea markets, yard sales and private house sales. I know what I'm looking for and do not like to be told by the professional "Estate Sale" dealer that the XXX that I am holding is "very old, worth XXX dollars in a shop. Phooey on that. If I'm looking at an item, I know what it is, what it is worth to me. If I have that gut feeling, I might pay a little more.
Granny's old glass salad bowl is from Woolworth's, circa 1950, it is not Depression glass. The pine chest in the upstairs is not "an early New England piece", it is a cottage chest, painted about 10 times and has less value that it would cost to have it refinished. Do it yourself, worth it maybe.
I know you have all overheard some of the Lulu things that have been told to customers. My best one: "you see, there is a paper label on the back, it is by Marshall Field of Chicago". Yipes!
Spring is almost here, Attics will soon be cleaned out. Can't wait. All I have to do is have a sale of my own so I'll have money to buy more stuff. Isn't there a pill to cure this?
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