
I had a couple of friends in *the business* who told me about eBay so I checked it out and I began buying a few things on eBay just to become familiar with it. Within 3 months (which was 1997) I felt confident enough to become a seller as well. I made a fair number of mistakes in the beginning but quickly learned about where and how to research items and get them identified or appraised. I learned that you should never ship any package you are afraid of dropping or drop-kicking. In other words, knowing how to properly pack for shipping. I received many broken items as a buyer, which always annoyed me. I didn't want the insurance reimbursement. I wanted the item.
It was during this time that the mother of a friend had passed away and after the family members had taken everything they wanted from her belongings, there was an entire houseful left. Our friend asked if I wanted to give it a go, otherwise they were having it all hauled to the dump. For me, this woman's lifelong collections turned out to be the education of a lifetime and one that could never have been acquired through schooling of any kind. It has been a journey through time for me, really. Each piece eventually revealing yet another layer of this interesting woman and the treasure trove of things she deemed worthy of collecting.
Everything I'm showing you here, belonged to this fascinating woman.


When I first began going through the house, I was shocked at the amount of wonderful things still there. I knew what many of the things were and stuck to only the things I could sell online and ship easily. I sold all of her marvelous hats, opera gloves, purses, cat's eye glasses, and costume jewelry with ease.


Eventually, eBay began raising their fees and it was hardly worth the trouble for smaller, less expensive items unless you were a Power Seller and sold things by the lot. I don't like most Power Sellers because they are careless with packing items and seldom see to it that anything is clean before shipping. That's just lazy and disgusting.

Since that never appealed to me, I started my search for a new venue in December of 2000 and by January 2001 I was happily divorced from fleaBay, and the sole owner and operator of my own shop within an internet antiques mall. I started out small, selling only the things I was sure about. It was the best move I could have ever made. I've been there almost 10 years and have been mostly happy with it. It beats selling on eBay, hands down.

I now own something like 82 to 85 ID books for various kinds of antiques and collectibles. These books are the key tools in selling antique pieces that will bring the right price. And still, some pieces need to have more than one appraisal or source of ID. There are a lot of fakes out there today and they are really good (especially the ones from China), even to the trained eye.


Once I was established in my new cyber home, I worked even harder and sold a great many items that we needed to sell, clearing much needed space. I'll show you some of those in another post. Unfortunately, I found that *stuff* tends to breed like rabbits at night. You wake up the next day only to discover more good (but unwanted) stuff which makes you want to pull out all your hair. It's a strange phenomenon.

However, for a few more posts I'm going to show and tell you about the Collections of Trixie. I can't begin to express the amount of knowledge and expertise I accumulated while learning about and selling the things she collected. Now that I'm done with her closet, we can move to another room and more of her lovely treasures.
To Be Continued....