THE EPHEMERA NETWORK

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I just inherited 100's of old 50's-90's recipe booklets,brochures,product user manuals and cookbooks etc.Also a lot of matchbooks rom restaurants,hotels, etc that are no longer in business and vintage tupperware,corelle,old wood handled tools etc.Where is the best place to market these without spending a fortune? Amazon is no help and Ruby Lane seems interesting?Any ideas much appreciated!!

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I've been selling mine at Collectors' Quest, in the Marketplace (currently free -- no fees at all). Not scads of them, but I've sold more ephemera than anything else there (a few dolls and vintage squeaky toys too).
Good morning I would say Ebay is still the best place to sell most anything you inherited even after all these years.
I know many say they no longer like ebay but the site still have most all the buyers. You have to go to the sites with buyers.
Etsy is also a very good site to try--Etsy site does not cost a lot of money 20 cents per listing and the items stay up for four months, I do very well on that site.
I have listed on many other sites like Ruby Lane (Costs are very high) I have found the sites that are FREE have tons and tons of NEW items your stuff gets lost. FREE sites do not work for me. If you want to make money you have to spend money!
FREE sounds nice- but you may put in a lot of work for nothing.
I just read through this discussion from last Fall. I have a sister who collects old cookbooks. Did you find a place to sell them online?

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