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Whatzit? Magnetizes Authentic Garage Sale E-mail
Thursday, 01 May 2008

by Rosemary Lee Potter

Special to Tropical Breeze

Most of the Saturday garage sale ads list a number of collectible items or categories which draw folks to that sale. Logical! However, one of my favorite findings when out garage sailing is to come on a sale where there's a Whatzit? table. Sure to attract attention, I almost always wind up buying something from that pile of stuff -- even if not the actual Whatzit -- somewhat eagerly when I'm knowing there's somebody else also "suddenly" interested. A bit of smug winning. You know the feeling -- victory in the fray.

People planning to have a garage sale might want to consider a deliberate move to provide some items which arouse curiosity -- which may or may not be actually identifiable by the seller. In this case, sellers have to be thick-skinned when someone buys something and then immediately hollers with glee!

"You didn't know what you had? Ha! Ha!"

Something about the "Does anybody know what this is?" seller statement magnetizes potential buyers. They rush to see if they can be the expert one to tell the rest of us what it is -- even if guessing -- and, of course, then regale us with the story of how they happen to know. I often find out collecting adventures to share in just that manner.

Here's what happened a Sunday afternoon or two ago in a real garage sale. I say real because the sale was actually held in the front driveways of the Eastport Exxon Service Station in Newport, Tennessee -- as in "garage."

I drove in and found the "whatzit" antique/collectible table smack in the middle of many others loaded with nice, general goods. There were several sellers and a number of buyers as well, these buyers rather spread out. The buyers immediately flocked to that curiosity table when one of the sellers casually called out, "Well, what do you think this is?," while pointing at some metal gizmo on the table.

My husband Peter and I flocked over at once. I hadn't a clue, but he said right off, that the device -- to me just a something loaded with gears, clamps, handle, what looked like a stone on a spit, was a sharpener, like a knife sharpener.

"I'll buy it," Peter said. To me it looked like a very old item, no matter its use, which had languished on some dirty barn shelf for a time. Something we needed? Not really. Moreover, the price was not yet bargained. Yes, the tag said $40, but husband quietly work out a deal with a seller for $25.

Meanwhile, although already sold, the device continued to attract other folks who shared information and also identified it. While at the table, they became interested in other items with good age on them -- and bought some of those. Shows that focusing on something intriguing increases focus period.. Also bought was then a small red stool of hand-hewn wood, perfect, one buyer informed me for milking "like when I was a kid."

While other buyers allowed me to take photos of beloved items from time past, they made sure that all watching knew these items were already purchased! Besides our knife sharpener, there was a tin and wood berry pan, a portable sewing machine with case which a man bought for his wife's quilting group and numerous bottles, still dirty from retrieval in some ravine or under an old house.

When I arrived home later, Peter showed off some other Whatzit stuff he'd acquired both at that true garage sale and at other stops along his workweek rounds. There was the Model-T Ford coil. Non-functional now. A basement had yielded some formerly very handy devices -- a wooden towel rack, a wooden toothbrush holder and a tin matchbox, all apparently handmade by some family long gone.

When I talked with other veteran garage sale vendors both in Florida and Tennessee, they agreed that relatively mysterious items do make great garage sale features or draws. They get buyers talking and engaged in sharing their own experiences. Sellers find that it's particularly helpful if the item served a special function such as a tool and if it looks complex. It's suggested that such items still be placed among other more obvious antique pieces and with a high enough price tag that they do not vanish home with someone before having served a useful attraction purpose.

For example, even though Peter had purchased the sharpener, he agreed to leave it there a little while as an attention-getter while he browsed close by for other items. Indeed, other shoppers kept remarking on the sharpener, even though they now actually knew both what it was and that it was sold. Maybe they appreciated it in the adventure of the day. As a friend suggested, however,. they might also have been delighting in not having bought it. That too at garage sales. Not remorse, but rejoice.

Well-known appraisers in big cities such as San Francisco and New York. make their livings and reputations by identifying items and offering valuations for insurance and possible auction reserves. The items they examine, say on PBS's "Antiques Roadshow," may be misidentified by owners or might be rightly identified, but through the experts, surprising new and important details. Scrimshaw maybe isn't on whalebone, no,instead carved on a hippo's tooth, that unusual fact heard recently on the popular TV appraisal show. Such details might increase value... or not.

Identification, especially with what is called authentic "provenance" or a back story of details or connection to historical events is both fascinating and immeasurable as to pricing. None of those high goals take away from our own collecting adventure paths as we look at both "whatzits?" and "know-all-about-its" in those driveways, garages and yards. Perhaps you will be the one person who knows exactly what something is and it's worth -- far more than you'll cleverly pay. Just don't holler your amazing, glorious fortune. That's so bad form.

All this psychology is what makes it a collecting adventure in the first place. Buyers, may you have many such good-find days, even bewaring a bit. So too, sellers, may you determine a special something which will be a buyer beacon and bring in those big bucks! Should your ad perhaps read -- "also, mystery items?"

© 2008 Rosemary Lee Potter. All Rights Reserved.

Rosemary Lee Potter is a confirmed victim of the collecting bug and can be reached by e-mail at This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it or write to her in care of Tropical Breeze, P.O. Box 585, Safety Harbor, FL 34695.

 
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