I am done with Disney pins !!!
Another thing that has been frustrating, is that with the move to other social media platforms, it seems like pins have become more of a business transaction than they ever were. Regardless of prices, just this is what I have, this is what I want, otherwise leave me alone.
Yes, I am talking resell. However, Disney has sold limited edition pin sets and jumbo pins for $100+ a pop in the past. I know the designer sets are always around $199 for example. I know for awhile, LE Tangled pins were on the secondary market for anywhere from $200-$1,000+. Haven't looked at Tangled pins in awhile so I don't know if the prices have dropped. But if you don't get a pin when its released, the resell price can get incredibly expensive.What pins our hundreds??? Are you talking resell???
I’ve been collecting pins since the 70s. They had little countertop rounders back then with maybe 8 pins total-some princesses and Winnie the Pooh. Sometimes you’d have to wait 2 years for a new pin to show up. They were TINY compared to today’s pins. But they were cheaper than t-shirts and the plush things back then, so I made them what I collected. I only could afford one at a time. I was in high school at the time.
I still remember the extreme excitement I felt in 2000 when I rounded a corner and saw dozens and dozens and dozens of pins on a wall. The original bump up in pins was a millennium promotion. I don’t even think Disney expected it to last this long. I didn’t even dare to think it would last past 2000, but here we are 16 years later.
I panic sometimes when it seems that Disney is losing their interest in it—the new website stinks compared to the old one. We lost the archives of the official site, and recently the listing of all the OE pins. There were a few low years there, but I think the variety and quality of pins has actually improved lately. I’m also upset about the fakes and especially the hard-core business attitude so many “traders” have now. It was not like that at all back in 2000 and the early years.
But I agree with pin2pin1 and speedwaystar1 that I still enjoy it—the collecting and the owning of Disney pins has, and I hope will continue to give me great joy into the future. I’m not ready to give up!!!
With that said, each of y'all concerns are my own. I've learned more recently that if there is a pin or a theme you really like, be patient and it will come down in price eventually.
I've chosen to make my main collection one that is more affordable even for LE 100. You know what? I get that same feeling when I find a pin that's harder to get for my collection as I would if it were a LE Ariel pin. So, I'm just changing things up for my collections so I don't stress out as before. And..... I'm having a ball. My pins are gorgeous and I love stopping and looking at them each day. I hope folks finds the enjoyment and fun in pin collecting and trading as they once did. Just my thoughts. Good luck everyone. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
My husband and I started collecting recently (2014), we went to the pin event in 2015. I think it was soon after the pin event that we decided to stop collecting/trading pins for the following reasons:
1. It seems that pin "trading" is pin "selling." And is geared towards those that live near the parks. We live in Michigan. I wanted to collect the Pixar Celebration pins for my son (since it's a nice "boy" collection). We received the first Pixar pin at the event. The second pixar pin I couldn't find for less than 50 dollars - that's a huge mark up.
2. Fakes in the parks. We loved trading with cast members, but when we looked at your "traded" collection and realized about 75% of them were fake...it seems financially irresponsible to continue trading in this manner.
#2. YUP! So many fakes and scrappers in the parks!
The only dark side for me are the people who continually bring fakes/scrappers to dump at the parks for every real pin they can get their hands on. I'm mainly talking about the regulars (weather local or not), who know exactly what they are doing. I see them all the time running, sometimes with a partner who runs in another direction, to get every real pin they can trade for. They have huge, not the sandwich size, ziplock bags FULL of fakes, hidden in a bag or softside cooler lunch bag. This is a business for them. They strip the CMs in one park and head to another that day. Sickening!!