Jun 20

My ebay Theory

 

 

Like any good bargain-hunter and perpetual decorator, I love ebay. And I often get asked by ebay newbies how do you bid and know how much to spend? Well, forgive the rant to follow but here is my theory: I tend not to subscribe to the view that if you don’t ‘win’ something on ebay then it just wasn’t meant to be. I believe that if you don’t win it then you just didn’t bid high enough. My view is that people expect to get a bargain on ebay, so tend to be blinded by the true relative value of things in a normal market. For example, you might see a French chair on ebay starting at $300 and think ‘Tell ‘em they’re Dreaming! (sad-case The Castle reference I use often in my head and sometimes in public). But you might happily pay twice that for the same chair in an up-market French homewares shop, where you’re caught up in the thrill of all the beautiful stuff around you.

Here’s my approach to ebay: I know I really want something if I can picture it in my house and am mentally arranging a room to accommodate it, and if I see it as mine already, before I’ve even bid. When I get that feeling I think of the number that would be the maximum of what I’d happily spend, then add another, say, 20%. If I don’t ‘win’ it after that, I can console myself that it has gone for far more than I can afford to spend.

If I don’t get ‘that feeling’ of having to have something, this is my test: if I saw it in an op-shop or at a market, what would I be prepared to spend? I have often paid more for something in an op-shop than for something similar on ebay, and I believe it’s because we all expect ebay sellers to be desperate to sell and for the prices to be low. From the point of view of a (-n occasional) seller, this can be frustrating. From a bidder’s perspective, if you concur with the low-price rule then it can be downright infuriating when others demur and push the price up.

Well, I’m afraid I fell foul of my own rules this evening, when I missed out on a fabulous French sofa, perfect for the turquoise-fabric-with-long-sofa-cushion-immitation I aspired to in Saturday’s post. A lovely reader had sent me a link to a perfect sofa candidate on ebay, and I was all geared up to pick it up this week. But when the moment of truth came, my measly bid fell short. The worst bit? I’ve seen the same sofa for sale before for half what it went for tonight, and it didn’t sell. I’m sure there is a lesson in here for me somewhere..

 

 

May 10

Blue fabric and more blue

I always love getting fabrics and fabric samples in the mail. It’s one thing to see a fabric in a photo but quite another to have it in your hands. Today I received this gorgeous blue and white hand-printed fabric. It’s ‘the vase’, a David Hicks design for Clarence House. I plan to use it in a house I am working on with lots of chinese blue-and-white ginger jars and vasesĀ and a splash of coral pink.

While I’m on the subject of blue, hereĀ is some more from a styling job (above and below);

and some more blue from my ‘inspiration files’ (so sorry I don’t know the sources):

Framed coral and blue buttoned ottoman, I want you both! See that top book on the ottoman (above)? It’s ‘Winter House’ by Charlotte Moss, and is one of my favourites for when I’m in the mood for warm, cosy, traditional style. I highly reccommend.

Blue bamboo chippendale chair, I like you a lot too! And those framed sketches hung on the bookshelves look great.

Blue and white is such a classic and wonderful combination, I never get sick of it!

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