Fake and Scrapper Phobia Discussion - Are we too quick to yell fake?
A couple months ago, I met a sweet little girl (around 5) and her mother who had just bought a Fab 5 starter pin set. I witnessed the little girl's very first trade (with another little girl) and she was so excited.
Her mom was saying that she hopes it'll be a fun hobby for her daughter. The mom had just bought about $100 worth of rack pins for the little girl to trade. I congratulated the little girl and noticed that the pin she got was a horrible Ariel scrapper. I watched the other little girl walk away and brag to her large family about her new awesome pin.
I felt so bad for the innocent little 5 year old, so I told the Mom that its a very fun hobby, but it would be worth it to do some research on "scrappers" and "fakes". I also recommended buying packs or small sets of pins to trade to save money. The mother got very overwhelmed and upset. She said, "Fakes? Why would Disney allow this?" I explained that it wasn't completely Disney's fault and its hard for them to control the huge amount coming through DLR.
In the meantime, her little girl had a huge smile and said, "Mommy, I got a Little Mermaid!" Her Mom smiled and whispered to me, "Is that pin for sure a fake? I will go get the other one back!" I told her that I didn't know for sure and if the little girl liked it, she should keep it. The mother seemed torn and confused, so I asked the little girl who her favorite Disney characters were. She mentioned Pooh, so I took out my 3D Vinylmation of Pooh (brand new) and gave it to her. I said, "This is for you. Good luck on your pin collection. I know it will be amazing."
I apologized to the Mom and told her that it was none of my business to mention the scrappers/fakes. She said it was okay and she will do anything to keep her daughter safe and happy. She thanked me for the pin and I left.
It probably wasn't my business, but parents who know nothing about pin trading and get their children into it are usually the ones spending huge amounts of money, and their children are the ones putting LE pins on CM lanyards for people like me to find. And I'm always shocked when I find LE's on a CM lanyard and the CM usually tells me they just got that trade from a little kid.
Sorry for the long story, I guess I'm just not sure whether I did the right thing.
You story brings up a very good point. As knowledgeable traders, is it our place to educate new folks about counterfeits/fakes and scrappers? You did the right thing, we all need to help clean up the trade hobby by stopping the trade of bad pins. But sometimes, people don't want to know, don't care to know, or they do know and act like they don't. the problem is knowing when to say something and when not to. It really is a case by case basis. In your situation I would have done the same thing.
I only worry when people tell you your pins are fake to put you on guard before trading. People use it as a bargaining technique and I don't like my integrity being questioned. That being said if I am unsure about a pin someone is interested in trading I will always advise them of where I received it and that I am unsure of its origin. I trade mostly on emotional value so if someone has a pin and I like it I will trade. HM pins are fun traders anyway we shouldn't scrutinize and demean others pins when trading for these fun sets of pins.
Yes. It happened to me. I sold a DSF Peter Pan Vault key and the girl I sold it to told me it was a fake. She said the pattern on the back didn't go to the edge and there was no serial number printed on the back. I assured her it was real because we had stood in line to get the pins. She still wanted her money back. It annoyed me a little because I felt she attacked my integrity...
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