Help with selling my china dishes

ecamc

Earning My Ears
Joined
Dec 24, 2003
Messages
36
I am considering selling my china dishes to earn some extra money. They have been packed up and unused for so long I know I wouldn't miss them and I definitely could use the money.
Does anyone know of how I should go about this, who to contact, online resources..things along those lines. I sure would appreciate any information.
Thanks so much!
 
The only site I know of is replacements dot com. My SIL buys lots of items there. It is a site where you can find pieces to match what you have (or that have broken). They also buy sets of China. I have never used them but you can call them with what you have and they will quote you a price.
 
Thank you for the quick responses. I will definitely check this website. It's a place to start..now wish me luck !
 

Just a quick note...replacements may not buy if it is a newer pattern or if they have a really big stock of your pattern already...that is the deal with mine right now.
 
My experience with them is that they will buy only if they have a demand for the item. I sent a request in awhile back to try to sell my MIL's china. No response for several months until they had a "request from someone to purchase the china." What they didn't know - and I wasn't purposely trying to do that, was that I had gone in and requested it myself because I wanted to see how much they would turn around and sell it for. I didn't sell it to them, as what they were offering me just wasn't worth it.

Hope you have better luck. I just bought a bunch of pieces of my own china off eBay. I'm reluctant to try to sell much lately though just because their fees have gotten so ridiculous.
 
Thanks for the link. My Mom is looking for some pieces and if we can't find them this summer (yard sales) I might suprise her for Christmas.:goodvibes
 
I sold an entire set of china (really, really ugly pattern!) for almost $700 on Ebay years ago. It was a hand-me-down set when DH and I got our first place, and I almost threw it out rather than putting it on Ebay. Research your pattern and see if it sells well on Ebay. If it does, it's worth it to list it. If not, it's really not worth the hassle to list and then package it up for shipping. The shipping part was a little tough (I really didn't want anything to break, and one plate still did unfortunately). Still, though, for nearly $700 it was worth the effort!
 
You might just try advertising on craigslist to sell locally,

that way you don't have to worry about the super careful packing you have to do to ship it.

I sold some china on eBay years ago and some pieces arrived broken - it was a real pain to sort out with my buyer.
 
If there is someone in your area who does estate sales you might call and ask them for advice.

Check for consignment stores in your area.

Do you have an antiques mall, with individual sellers? Perhaps one of them would be willing to place your china in their booth.
 
I might give Craigslist a try. I haven't done that before, but I have looked at the site several times.
We do have several antique type malls with individual booths, so I could check into that fairly easily.
I am not really the ebay type but I will probably check it out anyway. You never know what option will turn out to be the best.
I have a Noritake pattern and quite a bit of it, so I really need to get a list together I guess and move on from there.
Again, thanks for all the help.
 
I would just hate to try to ship china.

Years ago I had some china sent to the house from Goldsmith's, now Macy's.
It was good china that had been discontinued and was on clearance.

When it arrived at the house a bunch of it was broken...and they couldn't replace it. It was just sad. I have looked at china on e-bay, but the possible shipping problems could it into a big headache.
 
honestly, I wouldn't wish what I went through on anyone. It would be so much better to just have the new dish owners take them away in their car, safe and sound than have them broken in shipping.

I hope you have some luck on craigslist :)
 
We sold our wedding china on ebay several years ago. We never used it - it was lovely (Wedgwood), and we had several unique pieces that were only available outside the US. Replacements Inc. would have only offered peanuts, so we didn't go that route.

We did use ebay, after checking out the best way to do it. What we found was that by breaking up (not breaking! :rotfl:) the set, we made A LOT more money than just offering the bunch of it together as one item. Sets consisting of items just like ours didn't get any bids at the time, and even groups of place settings didn't. But we cleaned up! Potential buyers usually want to add more of certain pieces (like just four more plates or six bowls or...?) to their own collections and are *really* willing to pay for those. But they don't want what they don't want - if that makes sense. We packed things VERY well, made shipping insurance mandatory and not a thing got broken. We sent the pieces all over the country and ended up making many brides and families happy with their purchases. And we loved the decluttering - and cash:lovestruc So, good luck and do your homework on what is actually selling — not just being listed — and for how much, on ebay.
 
I've sold 2 sets of china and a set of crystal stemware through a local vendor recommended by replacements.com. Check with replacements and see if there is a local vendor in your area, that way you won't have to pack up and ship your china. But, they won't take everything. DH had a Noritake set from his first marriage (of course I didn't want it) and they didn't have a demand for it so they wouldn't buy it. I ended up just giving it to a friend who liked it. Also, you can negotiate with local vendors. I sold one set for $200 and then inherited a very nice antique set and they offered me the same. I countered with $350, they gave me $300, and I was happy with that. Good luck!
 
It doesn't happen to be Franciscan Starburst?

That's what I collect and it is getting harder to find at yard sales and eBay is insanely expensive.
 
I hate those spammer people.

This was a helpful, thread, though. I learned to NOT sell to Replacements. :thumbsup2
 
I was going to suggest selling it off by piece but I see you have that advice already.
 













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