What Would Happen If... Eliminating LEs
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I was lucky enough to get into pin trading in 2010, when holy grails could be found for $50 and new releases were generally no more than double the original cost. It felt like a peaceful time, when you traded and collected for the pure joy of the hobby. 2010 was a calm before the storm in retrospect.
Now the hobby feels like it’s in chaos. People understand that they can flip limited, rare pins for a huge profit margin and some even make a job out of it. I have flipped a pin or two before in my day, so I am no better than anyone else, but I feel like this sense of hyper-profitability can ruin the hobby as a whole. In essence, anyone who is on a budget, doesn’t have excess expendable income, or someone who just enjoys a newly released pin for what it is (but not at an inflated price of $300) may never be able to attain said pin(s).
Believe me when I say that I get it... as you start out in the hobby, hidden mickeys and park pins are “cool” and “enough” and “board worthy” as another member puts it, but once you’re exposed to the quality of lower edition pins, for most collectors there is no going back. You are emotionally invested and you will pay extra for the enhanced quality/design of an LE. Let’s face it, LEs have different/more creative designs than the stock imaged park pins and less chances of scrappers than the hidden Mickeys. LEs are simply more desirable to some, maybe because of their value, or their design, or their quality/size, or their rarity, or the fact that “I have it and you don’t... he he ha ha”, or a mixture of it all.
The reality of it all is that these are not gold, and they should only hold the value of sentiment/the original cost. I understand that as things get older and harder to find, the price can increase. But I find it ridiculous that a pin released today for $30 shoots up to $400 the very next day because it is LE 300 or because someone camped out overnight for it or because 10,000 people would love to add it to their collection but Disney limited that opportunity/happiness to only 300 (and if you don’t live in Florida or California, you’re entirely screwed). I get the concept of supply and demand, but supply and demand to my knowledge would mean creating open edition/high quality pins so that Disney profits more from them ($15x300 edition sized pins is far less than $30x10,000 edition sized pins).
Disney is actually working against its collectors (and for the scalpers) by supplying only limited amounts of high quality pins. Whether limited edition or not, I can totally see a pin like the WDI heroines set selling at $30 each and being open edition. Or better yet, why can’t Disney create a pre-order system where they put up a design, collectors pre-order the pin, and Disney casts (is that the right word for the pin-making process?) that number of pins according to the pre-orders so they never take a loss or make too many. Maybe I’m oversimplifying here but you get my point... work with us Disney.
So my question is, why can’t Disney release high quality open edition pins like the WDI/DSSH/Employee Center pins in bigger numbers. Sell a set like the Beloved Tales online for $30 each but release 10,000. Sell pins like the WDI Hero/Heroines pins for $30 each and don’t put an LE on them. Wouldn’t this mean more profit for Disney, less secondary market scalping, and happier Disney pin collectors?
Maybe I’m mistaken, and for some reason this could actually hurt the hobby in the long run. I get the allure of LEs and the thrill of the chase and rare collectibles and profitability.
I’m sure the over-saturation of beanie babies can be used as a comparison, especially after that “stock crashed” (even though Disney is so beloved and has so much history it would be hard to oversaturate at this point). But I get that over-saturating the market with countless open editions could in the grand scheme of things have a similar affect...
With all of that being said, I don’t actively collect anymore (though I do help my best friend collect Pluto pins), but it’s just sad that Disney has made sharking/scalping so easy... there are so many collectors out there who just genuinely desire pins of quality and could still afford and would still shell out $30 for WDI quality pins (double what Disney sells it for anyways). And in eliminating LEs, Disney would make way more fans happy and give everyone across the states and internationally an opportunity to extend their collections without having to sacrifice other amenities (like rent, or food, or churros in the park).
Are there any downsides to this? Would you prefer LEs to remain the same, or do you think Disney could release open edition, high quality pins akin to WDI/DSSH/Employee Center pins and still keep the hobby booming. Obviously it would mean pins are no longer like “stocks” and that they may not retain their value. But valuing pins monetarily takes away from the essence of pin trading IMO, and if a few collectors were turned away by that aspect, maybe they were collecting for all the wrong reasons anyways.
Just the long-winded midnight rant of a longtime, sleepless fan
Now the hobby feels like it’s in chaos. People understand that they can flip limited, rare pins for a huge profit margin and some even make a job out of it. I have flipped a pin or two before in my day, so I am no better than anyone else, but I feel like this sense of hyper-profitability can ruin the hobby as a whole. In essence, anyone who is on a budget, doesn’t have excess expendable income, or someone who just enjoys a newly released pin for what it is (but not at an inflated price of $300) may never be able to attain said pin(s).
Believe me when I say that I get it... as you start out in the hobby, hidden mickeys and park pins are “cool” and “enough” and “board worthy” as another member puts it, but once you’re exposed to the quality of lower edition pins, for most collectors there is no going back. You are emotionally invested and you will pay extra for the enhanced quality/design of an LE. Let’s face it, LEs have different/more creative designs than the stock imaged park pins and less chances of scrappers than the hidden Mickeys. LEs are simply more desirable to some, maybe because of their value, or their design, or their quality/size, or their rarity, or the fact that “I have it and you don’t... he he ha ha”, or a mixture of it all.
The reality of it all is that these are not gold, and they should only hold the value of sentiment/the original cost. I understand that as things get older and harder to find, the price can increase. But I find it ridiculous that a pin released today for $30 shoots up to $400 the very next day because it is LE 300 or because someone camped out overnight for it or because 10,000 people would love to add it to their collection but Disney limited that opportunity/happiness to only 300 (and if you don’t live in Florida or California, you’re entirely screwed). I get the concept of supply and demand, but supply and demand to my knowledge would mean creating open edition/high quality pins so that Disney profits more from them ($15x300 edition sized pins is far less than $30x10,000 edition sized pins).
Disney is actually working against its collectors (and for the scalpers) by supplying only limited amounts of high quality pins. Whether limited edition or not, I can totally see a pin like the WDI heroines set selling at $30 each and being open edition. Or better yet, why can’t Disney create a pre-order system where they put up a design, collectors pre-order the pin, and Disney casts (is that the right word for the pin-making process?) that number of pins according to the pre-orders so they never take a loss or make too many. Maybe I’m oversimplifying here but you get my point... work with us Disney.
So my question is, why can’t Disney release high quality open edition pins like the WDI/DSSH/Employee Center pins in bigger numbers. Sell a set like the Beloved Tales online for $30 each but release 10,000. Sell pins like the WDI Hero/Heroines pins for $30 each and don’t put an LE on them. Wouldn’t this mean more profit for Disney, less secondary market scalping, and happier Disney pin collectors?
Maybe I’m mistaken, and for some reason this could actually hurt the hobby in the long run. I get the allure of LEs and the thrill of the chase and rare collectibles and profitability.
I’m sure the over-saturation of beanie babies can be used as a comparison, especially after that “stock crashed” (even though Disney is so beloved and has so much history it would be hard to oversaturate at this point). But I get that over-saturating the market with countless open editions could in the grand scheme of things have a similar affect...
With all of that being said, I don’t actively collect anymore (though I do help my best friend collect Pluto pins), but it’s just sad that Disney has made sharking/scalping so easy... there are so many collectors out there who just genuinely desire pins of quality and could still afford and would still shell out $30 for WDI quality pins (double what Disney sells it for anyways). And in eliminating LEs, Disney would make way more fans happy and give everyone across the states and internationally an opportunity to extend their collections without having to sacrifice other amenities (like rent, or food, or churros in the park).
Are there any downsides to this? Would you prefer LEs to remain the same, or do you think Disney could release open edition, high quality pins akin to WDI/DSSH/Employee Center pins and still keep the hobby booming. Obviously it would mean pins are no longer like “stocks” and that they may not retain their value. But valuing pins monetarily takes away from the essence of pin trading IMO, and if a few collectors were turned away by that aspect, maybe they were collecting for all the wrong reasons anyways.
Just the long-winded midnight rant of a longtime, sleepless fan
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