With the "Great Quinntopia Sell-Off" still in progress, I thought I would share this photo of a bunch of buildings going to the Post Office for their new owner! An interesting side note as that a few buyers picked up nearly all of my buildings, which means that somewhere, someplace, someone is going to have a pretty good share of my urban layout! This makes me happy as I like to think that these buildings will be able to seen together as part of a new city.
I do get quite a few questions about the buildings from people on eBay, mostly asking me if I have any more to sell! Unfortunately, all the 'big' ones with lights are gone. I do have a few smaller ones and some facades and other odds and ends that I either haven't had the time to list yet, or need a wire reconnected.
What I'm listing now is mostly rolling stock: Locomotive, freight cars, Subway sets, etc...
I have several items (locomotives and sets) that I think are in decent demand, so I'm going to post a few using the 'auction' model later this week (probably Thursday night). So keep an eye out on my eBay channel (store?) if you're curious....
Its almost impossible to figure out a 'fair' price for all of this. While, in fact, nearly everything (not all!) that I am selling has been used or opened (and a few pieces with some minor damage or flaws), asking a full, new, retail price is insane! But what about the cost of the added decoder? Or interior lights (for passenger cars)? Do people care about those? I still get questions about DCC decoders working in analog, so clearly the DCC aspect has little interest for some people.
Even though I tried to price my buildings really fairly (an informal formula based on level of interior detail, amount of interior lighting, amount of work that went into either the kit-bash or scratch-building, and how the end result turned out) with most selling around $140-$160, but a few really large and 'premium' buildings at $300 or more.
But, they all sold within a few days. Does that mean I priced them too low? Maybe, but I don't think so. Again, there's always a bit of regret saying goodbye to something that represents literally hundreds of hours of time, but with where my time and priorities are right now, its all good.
I can build more! :-)
I would like to nkow where did you get your EL train bridge pieces at? can't ding them anywere
ReplyDeleteMost of the EL was scratch built. I have several posts on it (it took about two years!) but there were a few pieces (Kato double track gider bridge) for some areas. I think your asking about the main EL sections. This post covers most of it: https://quinntopia.blogspot.com/2016/01/working-on-elevated-little.html
DeleteThank you so much
ReplyDeleteIts been great to read your progress over the years. All the best with your new venture and hope to see you back sometime soon. Cheers, John B
ReplyDeleteSo sad seeing your amazing layout gone in a fire sale, but I completely understand. Started my own business, and still hoping to have time to get a layout built. Good luck and I hope to see your new layout sometime in the future.
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