I think the consensus opinion is that yes you can sell them on e-Bay, Facebook Market Place, auction sites, etc., but it is highly unlikely the selling price will cover the value of time and materials.
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As a way to introduce our brass coins to the community, we will raffle off a free coin during the month of August. Follow link ABOVE for instructions for entering. |
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On the +side: as they have none, ship models will never lose their market value! So just keep building your models for fun, or don't build them at all.Well, you asked for it:
Question: How to sell ship models?
Answer: Ship models can't be easily sold because most all of them have no market value whatsoever.
1. What little customer base exists is generally ignorant and can't tell a good one from junk, let alone know how to appraise it.
2. There are very few people who care enough about ship models to spend money on one. (However, by some reports, there are still people in Sweden who haven't yet received the memo.)
3. The market is flooded with an oversupply of worthless finished kits and schlock from foreign sweatshops, resulting in a devaluation of true fine art ship models.
4. Styles change. Present interior design trends favor sparse, sterile, environments without display pieces like ship models. Few people have any interest in buying a dust catcher for their home or office.
5. Ship models are not perceived as a fine art investment vehicle as are other more marketable representational fine art forms. Ship models generally tend not to appreciate at the same rate as fine art except, in some rare cases, as antiques. They often require greater care and conservation than other representational fine art and generally take up much more space to display.
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How to sell?The question in the thread was how to sell ships, no one has given a sensible answer.
WELL SAID! That's it in a nutshell.Well, you asked for it:
Question: How to sell ship models?
Answer: Ship models can't be easily sold because most all of them have no market value whatsoever.
1. What little customer base exists is generally ignorant and can't tell a good one from junk, let alone know how to appraise it.
2. There are very few people who care enough about ship models to spend money on one. (However, by some reports, there are still people in Sweden who haven't yet received the memo.)
3. The market is flooded with an oversupply of worthless finished kits and schlock from foreign sweatshops, resulting in a devaluation of true fine art ship models.
4. Styles change. Present interior design trends favor sparse, sterile, environments without display pieces like ship models. Few people have any interest in buying a dust catcher for their home or office.
5. Ship models are not perceived as a fine art investment vehicle as are other more marketable representational fine art forms. Ship models generally tend not to appreciate at the same rate as fine art except, in some rare cases, as antiques. They often require greater care and conservation than other representational fine art and generally take up much more space to display.
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Now that is a truthOne can actually sell the kit for more than the finished model from same…
AND, in the Great Lakes largest port, a signed Hockey Stick is more valuable than a well-made ship model.