A local charity shop had a Polaroid SX-70 kit in a fitted case complete with three rolls of film (35mm Fuji) for the bargain price of £75![]()
The bright side to that situation is, if ever they do have any nice analog gear then they may sell it for next to nothing just to be rid of it. Remember when high-end analog audio gear was dumped for next to nothing... and now the prices recuperated (for the very fine stuff)? Buy low... sell high.
... and why shouldn't they? Their goal is to maximize the financial return from donated items.
I'm not saying they "shouldn't", but it would be nice if an item or two would be allowed to trickle through the store itself. Goodwill is not a non-profit and they rely on their funds to pay employee's that would have a hard time getting a good job elsewhere. I do have a very big problem with what some of those so called "non-profit" organization pay their upper CEO's while leading you to believe you're REALLY donating to a non-profit. Of course that's another story. So, if they are sticking all the "GOOD" stuff on auction sites and will end up putting more and more things there for more profit, what's going to happen to the worker on the floor of the store? Or better yet, what's going to happen to the store itself. Since the whole purpose is to help folks with less of a chance in the real world, both workers and poor folks that need to shop there, it seems counter productive for both. That's just my opinion of course and it means nothing, except to me. But I also do not worship Capitalism like some folks I know do. I've seen some of its evils first hand and it ain't always a bed of rose's. John W
... and why shouldn't they? Their goal is to maximize the financial return from donated items.
PS...
I think the real bargains are in camera stores nowadays. Many shops will take old film stuff as trade-in then have it sitting on a shelf for ever. I rang a shop the other day about a EOS 3. Mint and boxed they were killing it for £49 and that's with 6 months warranty just to get rid of it. As we were filling the order he said "you wouldn't fancy minty and boxed 1N for the same price? I'll give you free postage on the lot". So I buy a mint EOS 3 and a mint EOS 1N for £100. I then sold the 3 for £85. So that's £15 I paid for a 1N.
And which shop was that?![]()
In my area, Thrift shops will sometimes have some film gear worth looking at (SLRs, rangefinders and polaroids) but its mostly just crappy point and shoots from the 90s.
T4 cameras in Swindon.
I gave up on the thrift store/goodwill/garage store circuit 10 years ago. After a full summer of going to about 100 yard sales and visiting thrift stores almost daily, I figured that ship has sailed.
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