Last year, I participated in a local consignment sale that sells all kids items. I made $37 for the work I put into it, which is more than I could've hoped for given how little I had to start off with.
A few weeks ago, I signed up to participate again. I have a few weeks to go through everything, get it all tagged and ready to go. I can also take some items that got left behind last time. Hopefully, I do at least as well as last time.
Since reading the article, I've thought about trying the same thing myself. However, I don't trust that I have an eye for what would sell for more at a consignment store. I'd be afraid I'd be stuck with a bunch of crap I don't need. Still, though, maybe I can weed through the things I already own and don't want or need and take them in.
A few weeks ago, I signed up to participate again. I have a few weeks to go through everything, get it all tagged and ready to go. I can also take some items that got left behind last time. Hopefully, I do at least as well as last time.
Speaking of Consignments ...
Our local newspaper ran an article a couple of months ago about local consignment stores I found really interesting. One of the store owners featured in the story said she had a consigner who shops local garage sales for cheap finds, then sells the items at the consignment store, receiving a check from the consignment store that averages about $800 a month. Of course, that doesn't account for the money she spends at the garage sales buying the items to begin with, but even a net income of $400 a month on consignment sales impresses me.Since reading the article, I've thought about trying the same thing myself. However, I don't trust that I have an eye for what would sell for more at a consignment store. I'd be afraid I'd be stuck with a bunch of crap I don't need. Still, though, maybe I can weed through the things I already own and don't want or need and take them in.
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