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Yet another account of the shrinking antiques/vintage market, although this one contradicts some assertions in the others. Like the others, though, much of it hinges on anecdotal observation, so take that for whatever it is worth.
There’s apparently hard(ish) data to show that attendance at events such a Brimfield is a fraction of what it once was. The writer of this piece cites the rise of online outlets (eBay, etc.) as being a major contributing factor in the shrinking prices of old stuff and the sizes of crowds at antique fairs and the like. A person can't help but reassess the rareness of an item after he goes online and finds 50 others just like it.
Still, he tells of younger people getting into the game, both as buyers and sellers. But much of what they're buying and selling aren't "real" antiques. That's his angle on it, anyway.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/magazin...d-old-again/qRtth5ulfaWawmbUFIjUsJ/story.html
There’s apparently hard(ish) data to show that attendance at events such a Brimfield is a fraction of what it once was. The writer of this piece cites the rise of online outlets (eBay, etc.) as being a major contributing factor in the shrinking prices of old stuff and the sizes of crowds at antique fairs and the like. A person can't help but reassess the rareness of an item after he goes online and finds 50 others just like it.
Still, he tells of younger people getting into the game, both as buyers and sellers. But much of what they're buying and selling aren't "real" antiques. That's his angle on it, anyway.
https://www.bostonglobe.com/magazin...d-old-again/qRtth5ulfaWawmbUFIjUsJ/story.html
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