elaw said:What I've done with my Scrapper and Counterfeit pins is cut the pin backs off them and glued some strong magnets to the back using epoxy and made some really nice refrigerator magnets out of them![]()
The issue I have here is that I honestly cannot tell the difference between the scrappers and the real pins.
. I've heard all the tips about the color, the imprint on the back, etc. but I still have no idea. .
The issue I have here is that I honestly cannot tell the difference between the scrappers and the real pins. Probably because I'm a novice and am not into collecting, we are just doing it for fun. I've heard all the tips about the color, the imprint on the back, etc. but I still have no idea. What do you guys suggest? We don't trade with anyone but CMs, because we really aren't serious about it. But I would feel bad trading a scrapper to a CM, which then ends up with someone else. Right now I'd say we are at about half and half with pins we have purchased in the parks and ones we have traded.
So what do you all suggest? Just bag trading entirely? Just continue as we have, trading with CMs? Or is there kind of a divide, where if you are doing it just for fun, scrappers are OK, but obviously serious traders would verify authenticity? Any tips would be much appreciated.
The issue I have here is that I honestly cannot tell the difference between the scrappers and the real pins. Probably because I'm a novice and am not into collecting, we are just doing it for fun. I've heard all the tips about the color, the imprint on the back, etc. but I still have no idea. What do you guys suggest? We don't trade with anyone but CMs, because we really aren't serious about it. But I would feel bad trading a scrapper to a CM, which then ends up with someone else. Right now I'd say we are at about half and half with pins we have purchased in the parks and ones we have traded.
So what do you all suggest? Just bag trading entirely? Just continue as we have, trading with CMs? Or is there kind of a divide, where if you are doing it just for fun, scrappers are OK, but obviously serious traders would verify authenticity? Any tips would be much appreciated.
Totally agree. It's not easy to tell, and it's not fun to try. If I had to fuss about checking pins, pin collecting would not be fun and I would become 1) snobby and 2) disappointed a lot. I have no idea which of my pins are "genuine" and which aren't. I don't need to know, and I don't want to make a fun hobby a big bummer. They're just pins for goodness sake.The issue I have here is that I honestly cannot tell the difference between the scrappers and the real pins. Probably because I'm a novice and am not into collecting, we are just doing it for fun. I've heard all the tips about the color, the imprint on the back, etc. but I still have no idea. What do you guys suggest? We don't trade with anyone but CMs, because we really aren't serious about it. But I would feel bad trading a scrapper to a CM, which then ends up with someone else. Right now I'd say we are at about half and half with pins we have purchased in the parks and ones we have traded.
So what do you all suggest? Just bag trading entirely? Just continue as we have, trading with CMs? Or is there kind of a divide, where if you are doing it just for fun, scrappers are OK, but obviously serious traders would verify authenticity? Any tips would be much appreciated.
IMO if "you" know they are fake then you shouldn't trade them
I like high-end handbags. When someone counterfeits one of those, they are not using the correct materials, patterns or hardware. They are not authorized at all to manufacture the purses. These pins however, are made in the same factory, by the same people, using the same materials as the real pins. They are called scrappers because they are made with the scraps of the Disney-authorized pins. Disney authorizes a run of 1000 pins. The manufacturer makes those 1000 pins, and then runs off maybe another 200 pins using the scraps of the original 1000 and leftover paint. Thus the scrapper pins tend to have faded coloring, are much thinner, and often had less precise outlines.
If Disney would manufacture the pins within the United States, they could take more precautions to eliminate these scrappers.