In addition to posters I collect plaster statues (most around 18  inches in 
height) of celebrities.  i have around 400 including most movies  stars of 
the 30', 40's and 50's.
 
I once bought Abbott and Costello from a seller whose place was 30  miles 
from me.  When the box came everything inside was rattling so I knew  I did 
not own two perfect statues.  Each was in a supermarket paper bag  with no 
protection.  They were both smashed to pieces.
 
When I called the seller and asked why he did not protect them with  bubble 
wrap this was his answer:  "They were only going 30 miles."  I  told him 
that the way the shipping companies toss the boxes they would not have  lasted 
30 feet.
 
In any case, I got my money back and bought a perfect pair from  another 
seller.
 
These statues go well on a shelf below one's favorite posters,  which is 
how I got started.  You can find them on ebay by searching  ESCO.  If you 
would like to see them, email me.
 
Claude Litton
 
 
In a message dated 6/8/2010 2:57:11 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
[email protected] writes:

 
I  will see your worst packing description, and raise you  THIS: 
A  couple months ago, I received a poster from an eBay seller in Italy  (“
icetrap72”: all I can say is “beware”); it was an Italian 2-fogli, so it’s  
roughly 39”x55”.  The seller’s ad  on eBay pictured the poster with a 
single vertical fold down the middle, and  three horizontal folds, as is 
standard for these.  The price of the poster was close to  US$125, with 
shipping.  
I actually  already owned this particular poster, but was hoping to upgrade 
to one in  better condition, which this appeared to be. 
The  seller (who sells posters on eBay regularly, though not in huge 
numbers)  shipped it wrapped (from Italy to the US) in …. wait for it …. 
GIFTWRAP.  No cardboard, no protection, just  wrapped in a single layer of 
paper 
that was thinner than the paper the poster  itself was printed on.  (Of  
course, the flimsy giftwrap paper was torn on  arrival here in California, 
exposing the poster itself, which was of course  also torn).  
And,  to add insult to injury, presumably to save on giftwrap, he had 
folded the poster an additional time or  two prior to shipping it (so it 
arrived 
with THREE vertical folds instead of  one)!  (Or, possibly, it had  always 
been tri-folded, but the poster he had pictured in his ad was a  different 
specimen…actually, I suspect that’s closer to the  truth.) 
Needless  to say, after getting no response to my complaints from the 
seller (should  have checked his feedback before bidding, as it was lousy), I 
went through  eBay’s claims process, which surprisingly worked very smoothly.  
I shipped the poster back, and got my  $$ refunded by eBay, less my costs of 
return postage (though, to Italy, those  costs were substantial, because in 
order to claim a refund you have to do the  return shipment in a manner 
that provides delivery  confirmation). 
He’s  probably sold the poster four more times by now. 
  
____________________________________
 
Date:  Tue, 8 Jun 2010 12:55:32 -0400
From: [email protected]
Subject: Re:  [MOPO] Lawrence of Arabia Oscars WC arrives in s*** condition.
To:  [email protected] 
 
You  want a worst-packing description - I'll give you a worst packing  
description.
 

 
A  middle-grade auction house with no experience in posters (yes, I know I 
should  have been wary) had a movie poster auction a few years ago.  Most of 
the  items were uttterly unremarkable but there were a  few of passing 
interest and I duly submitted my maximum bids and waited to see  what would 
happen.  I won three lots at precisely my maximum bid - quite  the coincidence.
 

 
Two  items had to be sent flat and were packed quite well, however the 
Bullitt  1-sheet was tightly rolled into a flimsy (I could crush it with my 
little  finger) tube about 1.5" in diameter.  Bad enough you might think, but 
the  kicker was the tube was about 6" too short so the packer got a second.  
equivalent tube to cover the exposed 6", squeezed the open end of the first  
tube into the second piece so the combined length now covered the poster, 
then  used a stapler to hold the two pieces of tube together.  Since the 
poster  was right next to the area where the tube pieces overlapped the 
multiple  
staples went right through the tube and into the poster, and since the 
poster  was so tightly rolled each staple made about eight holes.  The poster 
was  probably in quite good condition before being sent, but on arrival it had 
 multiple crush marks and more perforations than a tea  bag.
 

 
Colin
 
 
On  TuesdayJun 8, 2010, at 9:35 AM, John Waldman  wrote:

 
 
 
I  guess we all have our shipping horror stories.  I received another 1  
sheet in a Christmas wrapping paper tube.  Hope that's  not becoming a common 
practice. 
 

Window  cards do tend to be packed very poorly because of their size, and 
they are  easily damaged when packed cheaply.  Sometimes an Ebay seller 
surprises me how well they pack WC's, but  most times they are packed as cheap 
as 
possible.  (The professional  poster sellers on Ebay are not a problem as 
far as  packing goes.) 
 

The  worst packed I've ever seen was the 1/2 sheet I received in a small  
envelope.  The poster had been folded to 1/8's to get it in the envelope.   A 
50 year old poster totally destroyed. 
John W





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