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$47?!
WHATEVER!!!!!
LD
WHATEVER!!!!!
LD
Lady Day said:$47?!
WHATEVER!!!!!
LD
Lady Day said:lol
1) It is a lot of exclusively Mother of Pearl, the most common button you can find.
2) Most of them are very tiny.
3) Way too many duplicates in the lot.
4) the visible conditions of the cards are only good to fair.
5) There is only one MOP card with real good colored buttons (and the purpled one at the bottom).
6) Only half the lot has desirable graphics (I wanted the dude smoking on the middle left card) Like the nurse bunch, but the two men at the bottom, I trip over those cards all the time.
6) No real exotic shaped buttons either (and not a lot of bottom shank buttons).
The only real gems are the nursing cards, and the two lower center 20s cards. I could see paying 15-$20 for them alone. Distant second would be the upper left 20s cards (pale blue cards), but even those are fairly common. Everything else I wouldnt go above 30¢ a card.
But thats me
LD
Lady Day said:
$175 lol
I KNEW this was going over $100 when I saw the listing and it was at $65 four days ago!
Its incredible (I mean an asymmetrical apron WITH cuffs!) but an obscenely simple pattern.
Apron collectors out there: Whats the deal? Why are aprons so sought after?
LD
Lauren said:That is SO cute! But how hard is it to draft up an apron? Seriously.
I'm saving the pictures. Ha.
From what I can see, apron patterns appear to be a good first step into vintage patterns for someone used to modern patterns. They are also good for someone who is new to sewing. So, ya got your modern sewers who have never sewn with vintage and your vintage lifestylers who have never sewn. Also, there seems to be a big group of sewers who don't wear vintage because it's costumey but will wear vintage aprons because they are only worn in the house or can be used with funky/modern novelty prints and not look totally vintage.Lady Day said:Apron collectors out there: Whats the deal? Why are aprons so sought after?
cassylynn said:Hands down to the winner of these items!
I thought this was really cute, but I was outbid and I forced myself to stay away from the computer lol lol
OMG, this is as cute as a button!!!
kamikat said:From what I can see, apron patterns appear to be a good first step into vintage patterns for someone used to modern patterns. They are also good for someone who is new to sewing. So, ya got your modern sewers who have never sewn with vintage and your vintage lifestylers who have never sewn. Also, there seems to be a big group of sewers who don't wear vintage because it's costumey but will wear vintage aprons because they are only worn in the house or can be used with funky/modern novelty prints and not look totally vintage.