MattieXMoto
A-List Customer
- Messages
- 327
- Location
- NYC
Just a hunch or observation. For ME whether here or ebay, it has become harder to find a good home for our pre loved threads and hides.
InterestingI don’t often sell here…I tend to get better prices on eBay even after their fees.
I’m focused on hats. It’s easy to sell good vintage hats, but it’s harder to find good vintage hats to sell.
I think there's a lot to this. When I first walked in the door here, the emphasis was very strongly on the artifacts and general culture of 1930s-40s, with a secondary spread into the 1950s. Most of the people here seemed to have come to that interest via the "swing revival" of the late 1990s. Most of that initial cadre has long since left -- some moved on because they lost interest in that period, and some moved on because of the general drift of the forum away from that initial focus. And the forum itself has become a much more generalized venue. There are still a few of us around who remain interested in, for want of a better term, pre-boomer culture and artifacts, and we tend to keep to ourselves. Most of us in that group are less interested in cosplaying that era than in discussing its various aspects, and do relatively little buying or selling.Pure speculation on my part, so with that in mind …
Might it be that stuff of “Golden Era” vintage has had its moment?
Even among this bunch, it seems I see more and more references to artifacts of much more recent vintage. All sorts of stuff from the 1960s and ’70s and later (into the 1990s, even) is much sought after by people who weren’t necessarily alive then.
Still, though, good style is good style, no matter its era. The trade sites and publications I read report that the market for antique and vintage stuff in general has made a marked recovery of late. It’s attributable to a few factors, in the opinions of the writers, not least of which is the value placed on “sustainability” by the younger segments of the buying public. And I gotta tip my hat to them. Yes, it is a world of finite resources, for one thing, and, for another, a set of table and chairs that has already survived in a perfectly serviceable condition longer than their parents have been alive is a far better use of one’s money than what might be had at IKEA or any one of several other low-end furniture retailers.
Few of us wish to live in a museum, though. Our living spaces are not sets for period pieces, although you wouldn’t know that by seeing some of the interiors featured in Atomic Ranch and other publications devoted to mid-century modern style. It seems MCM‘s moment had reached its apex and is on the decline, too. Which is not to say that artifacts of that era are no longer sought-after, but only that it no longer dominates.
I read reports from custom hat makers that this year's Black Friday was their slowest on record. Just not the traffic yet folks seem to still be spending. Perhaps inflation is taking a toll on discretionary spending.Pure speculation on my part, so with that in mind …
Might it be that stuff of “Golden Era” vintage has had its moment?
Even among this bunch, it seems I see more and more references to artifacts of much more recent vintage. All sorts of stuff from the 1960s and ’70s and later (into the 1990s, even) is much sought after by people who weren’t necessarily alive then.
Still, though, good style is good style, no matter its era. The trade sites and publications I read report that the market for antique and vintage stuff in general has made a marked recovery of late. It’s attributable to a few factors, in the opinions of the writers, not least of which is the value placed on “sustainability” by the younger segments of the buying public. And I gotta tip my hat to them. Yes, it is a world of finite resources, for one thing, and, for another, a set of table and chairs that has already survived in a perfectly serviceable condition longer than their parents have been alive is a far better use of one’s money than what might be had at IKEA or any one of several other low-end furniture retailers.
Few of us wish to live in a museum, though. Our living spaces are not sets for period pieces, although you wouldn’t know that by seeing some of the interiors featured in Atomic Ranch and other publications devoted to mid-century modern style. It seems MCM‘s moment had reached its apex and is on the decline, too. Which is not to say that artifacts of that era are no longer sought-after, but only that it no longer dominates.
I can attest to discounts being habituating. There are certain products at Costco and my local supermart that go on discount regularly. I now never ever pay full price for them as I just wait for the sale/coupon and stock up. It gets tricky when they stop discounting a product I am habituated to buying. I still refuse to pay full ticket and have to find an alternative. Vexing but doable.^^^^^^
It could be that Black Friday has had its moment, too. And just about every day is “Cyber Monday” these days.
A nephew in the car selling business tells me that consumers have gotten hip to “sales” associated with holidays such that traffic through the doors on such days isn’t extraordinary anymore.
There’s an outfit here locally that sells kitchen cabinets and granite countertops. They do lots of advertising. There’s ALWAYS a sale (associated with one holiday or another) featuring their “LOWEST PRICES!” and “WIDEST SELECTION!” “EVER!!!!”
Perhaps it’s a symptom of advancing years, but advertising is likelier to turn me away than draw me in.
When does an affinity for a bygone style become cosplaying?I think there's a lot to this. When I first walked in the door here, the emphasis was very strongly on the artifacts and general culture of 1930s-40s, with a secondary spread into the 1950s. … There are still a few of us around who remain interested in, for want of a better term, pre-boomer culture and artifacts, and we tend to keep to ourselves. Most of us in that group are less interested in cosplaying that era than in discussing its various aspects, and do relatively little buying or selling.
There are people here with thousands of posts I've never heard of. The historical stuff keeps me coming around, but there are few things in the world that interest me less than leather jackets. Unless John Garfield's wearing one in 1939.