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Made in gb
Human Auxiliary to the Empire






If I sell stuff on Ebay, do you think potential buyers would prefer the existing paint-job or should I respray them black? (The painting is pretty bad)

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2015/07/12 21:31:19


 
   
Made in au
[MOD]
Making Stuff






Under the couch

If the current paintwork isn't great, don't compound it by putting more paint over the top...

You might get a little more for then if you strip the paint off, since that saves the buyer some work. Whether or not the difference will be enough to be worth doing that extra work yourself is arguable, though. Best bet if you're not sure it's too look at how much similar stuff is going for painted vs unpainted.

This message was edited 1 time. Last update was at 2015/07/12 21:36:05


 
   
Made in us
Dakka Veteran





Armpit of NY

I'd agree pretty much - don't try to 'fix' them with more paint, and stripping them is unlikely to get you vastly more $$$s compared to the effort it will take to do it. I for one shop on eBay with the mindset that I'm going to have to strip and repaint already factored in.

Also, take good pictures, and be clear and honest in your descriptions and what your terms are. Cover your ***, and it's less likely you'll have problems with your buyer or eBay.
   
Made in si
Foxy Wildborne







I've seen lots of re-undercoated minis on eBay and it just pisses me off.

The old meta is dead and the new meta struggles to be born. Now is the time of munchkins. 
   
Made in gb
Fresh-Faced New User





I've bought quite a few models of ebay over the last few years and my advice is, DON'T RESPRAY!
Re-undercoated models lose a lot of detail, and are a pain in the arse to strip.

Just be honest about the paintjob and any damage to the model and you will be fine.
   
Made in us
Hooded Inquisitorial Interrogator





Oklahoma

it's also appreciated, just in case they DO like the paint job, that you know the colors/color range/type of paint used off hand in case they ask...

4000pts now... - Main Army, 4000pt , 5000pt , 8000pt ,3000pt

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Made in us
Rough Rider with Boomstick





Georgia

+1 for the no respray. I personally only go after minis that have no paint, a very basic (Drybrush and maybe some edging) paintjob, or that have only been primed. Also get pictures from all angles and don't skimp on the resolution. I personally won't bit on a model if I cant get a really good look at it.

Vorradis 75th "Crimson Cavaliers" 8.7k

The enemies of Mankind may employ dark sciences or alien weapons beyond Humanity's ken, but such deviance comes to naught in the face of honest human intolerance back by a sufficient number of guns. 
   
Made in gb
Fixture of Dakka






Sheffield, UK

If the paint job is bad I'll strip miniatures. Otherwise they go up as is.

Spain in Flames: Flames of War (Spanish Civil War 1936-39) Flames of War: Czechs and Slovaks (WWI & WWII) Sheffield & Rotherham Wargames Club

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Made in us
Dakka Veteran



South Portsmouth, KY USA

Tell you what, so that you don't have to decide, just send them to me, I'll give them a good home.

:-D

Armies: Space Marines, IG, Tyranids, Eldar, Necrons, Orks, Dark Eldar.
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Made in gb
[SWAP SHOP MOD]
Killer Klaivex







 mirrorworld wrote:
If I sell stuff on Ebay, do you think potential buyers would prefer the existing paint-job or should I respray them black? (The painting is pretty bad)


As someone who buys and sells a considerable amount on Ebay (I turned over more than a grands worth of wargaming material alone last month) , I have enough experience to know that a black respray usually garners a higher price and quicker sale than something with a mediocre/bad paintjob. It sometimes results in a slight softening of the detail, but that's rarely discernible from an Ebay picture, and so long as you mentioned in the listing that it has been painted black, there are no business issues that can arise from re-undercoating (your arse has been covered).

You often find that plastic troop miniatures which are badly painted and a nightmare to strip sell for peanuts or not at all, but a quick black spray can triple the value. The best spray I find for plastic (bizarely enough) tends to be the GW one, purely because the paint is so thin, that it rarely obscures much in the way of detail while giving an even undercoat. Army Painter spray on the other hand, is quite thick and can quickly render a previously painted plastic model unsellable. It does however, go quite nicely on the metal models that GW spray is too thin to handle.

This message was edited 4 times. Last update was at 2015/07/14 13:50:43



 
   
 
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