Alright, so, as mentioned, Sarah and I hit one more sale last Friday. I believe this one was in Trenton. When we arrived at the sale, it was immediately clear that this person was rich, and that they had a lot of time to buy rich people things.
The first room was filled with these elaborate dollhouses. They were all pretty remarkable.
What’s interesting about these type of dollhouses is that you never actually see little miniature dolls inside of them. What’s up with that?
Upstairs at this sale was a room completely full of designer purses, all of which still had the tags on them. At first I was sure they must be fake or something, because who buys $400 purses and doesn’t use them? All of the tags though had Macy’s stickers on them, so certainly they were real.
I think Sarah and I both would have loved to buy some of these. There were at least 100 to choose from. All of the bags were priced pretty close to retail, so we had to pass.
Back in the dollhouse room, I found a Muffy Vanderbear. When I was a child, my Aunt Cathy (who comments on this blog often and also publicly called my blonde hair “FRIGHTENING”) gave me Muffy bears and accessories every Christmas. They were by far my favorite childhood toys, even beating out Beanie Babies. I still have all of my Muffys and hope that one day I will have a daughter to play with them.
Anyway, this particular Muffy was one I already had in my collection, but it was in PERFECT condition, so I decided to buy it. I was carrying it around, and kept thinking, “Hm, I don’t remember my original Muffy having this gold necklace on it.”
Looking closer at the necklace, it was pretty clear that it was REAL gold. Someone had put a REAL GOLD chain on Muffy.
Knowing that gold is like crazy valuable right now, Sarah and I started speculating what it could be worth. I looked online and it said 14K gold was worth around $18 per gram. I then speculated that a gram was like one paper clip. However, neither of us could figure out how many imaginary paper clips might make up the necklace I had.
On our way to lunch we spotted one of those “Cash for Gold” places. When I say “spotted” I actually mean that we drove down the street specifically looking for any place that might buy gold. We were just way too excited.
So we got buzzed into the store, had the necklace weighed, and ended up selling it for $44! That price actually covered all of the purchases I had made that day, including lunch! Pretty exciting!
The lesson here people is not to store your gold jewelry on teddy bears, and then sell those bears. The other lesson here is that if someone does store their gold jewelry on a teddy bear, then totally buy that teddy bear.
-Erin