Scott 2 wrote: ↑Wed Feb 13, 2019 8:46 pm
I bought a picture once, wasn't worth it.
Hilarious. But yet you like museums? Maybe you'd have different results with a different picture. I'm curious how this one failed, though.
@jacob: Nice paradigm, but it doesn't account for the appearance of one's stuff. I'm OFLN, old and functional and looks new. That's the ideal, anyway. Hard to achieve when you live with other people, though.
Of course the two categories of the most valuable old stuff out there, or of stuff period, are "vintage" (25 yrs+) and "antique" (100 yrs +). Like new is the holy grail of old stuff. Just enough but not too much patina, etc.
I was looking to buy a silly children's game, Trouble. There are two new "retro" versions, $13 and $20, but the former is said to be made flimsily. Then there is the actual original on ebay, $30 and higher for one in "very good" condition. This thing is just a piece of plastic! I had no idea what I should do, for eco, financial, or any other reason, so I didn't buy anything. Maybe I'll screw up the nerve to visit my mother's messy house sometime, get lucky and stumble upon it in there.
@cats_and_tats: (awesome handle) it's too bad about the sofas. I think you may be able to find some with warranties? (Of course for the appliances and extended too). Anyway I can somewhat relate as I have purchased two sofas. The first was a big purchase and we've had it 15 yrs, reupholstered once as we used to have multiple dogs. Fun fact it is Danish and apparently indestructible. It's not stylistically what I would choose now after figuring out my aesthetic is not modernist but it's still a great sofa. The reupholstery was a compromise as I wanted a new sofa and DH didn't. I'm very glad now we kept it because of the second sofa I purchased 3 years ago. It was not cheap but much cheaper than the first. Also smaller, and looked great--tufting everywhere. After a year of light use the bench was not right. So I never want to sit on it or have guests sit on it but it's still there.