disneyhooper
Earning My Ears
- Joined
- Aug 2, 2015
- Messages
- 11
Does anyone have suggestions of where to buy bulk trading pins at a reasonable price prior to the trip?
I used to have an ethical issue with it till I was spending $8+ and my kids were getting scrappers back In exchange, as you mentioned there are tonsssss of them in the parks.There are a few FaceBook groups that have people who can sell actual authentic pins. You’ll be looking at around $2 a pin.
I really caution on eBay. Many of the pin lots (especially in the under $2 a pin lots) there are what traders call “scrappers”- that is, knock-offs. Technically you can probably get away with trading them in the parks. In fact, a lot of the pins available for trade are probably scrappers that other people traded into the pool. Because there are people who will do just that, intentionally- they know they have the cheap knock off, but they find the real one and trade it out. So they get the good pin, and leave the bad.
It’s a bit of an ethics problem, and is why a lot of people have moved away from trading in the parks. No one wants to find out that the pin they got in a trade is a cheap fake.
It's a combination of this and actual knock-off pins...if it were only scrapped pins, there wouldn't be such a large overflow of specific pins. Especially the knockoffs of more limited edition pins.I could be wrong, but I always thought that scrappers weren't "knock-offs" per se, but they were pins that were "scrapped" (i.e., discarded) at the factory in China or wherever due to minor flaws that meant they didn't pass QC standards. Subsequently, local "entrepreneurs" retrieve them from the dumpster and sell them on eBay.
Does anyone have suggestions of where to buy bulk trading pins at a reasonable price prior to the trip?
I could be wrong, but I always thought that scrappers weren't "knock-offs" per se, but they were pins that were "scrapped" (i.e., discarded) at the factory in China or wherever due to minor flaws that meant they didn't pass QC standards. Subsequently, local "entrepreneurs" retrieve them from the dumpster and sell them on eBay.
This is correct! It’s actually a very broad term- basically anything that isn’t a real, official Disney pin. So that includes bad quality discarded pins, pins made from the mold but by someone else who isn’t Disney, etc. Sorry, I couldn’t think of how to describe it so I just said knock-offs!I could be wrong, but I always thought that scrappers weren't "knock-offs" per se, but they were pins that were "scrapped" (i.e., discarded) at the factory in China or wherever due to minor flaws that meant they didn't pass QC standards. Subsequently, local "entrepreneurs" retrieve them from the dumpster and sell them on eBay.
I mean, sure. It’s an ethical conundrum- why trade a real pin when what you get back is fake? I have a few cheaper pins that I picked up from a FB group for around $2 a piece, and I use these to trade for pins I just like, scrapper or not. (It’s really easy to get discounted sets that work out to $2 a pin.) I figure that it’s worth an extra $1 to put an authentic pin back into circulation.I used to have an ethical issue with it till I was spending $8+ and my kids were getting scrappers back In exchange, as you mentioned there are tonsssss of them in the parks.
now I look at it as scrapper for scrapper and the experience is what my kids like vs knowing if something is 100% authentic or not.
heck, my kids like the experience of meeting Mickey and we all know that he is a fake![]()
That’s why with the last set we got, we went through them and tried as hard as we could to find the best ones to trade, the ones that to our untrained eyes were real/not scrappers. We used the Pin trading website to help too. It’s also why I let him buy a couple of packs at Disney for trading also.I mean, sure. It’s an ethical conundrum- why trade a real pin when what you get back is fake? I have a few cheaper pins that I picked up from a FB group for around $2 a piece, and I use these to trade for pins I just like, scrapper or not. (It’s really easy to get discounted sets that work out to $2 a pin.) I figure that it’s worth an extra $1 to put an authentic pin back into circulation.
Just a warning that if you try to trade a scrapper in a real pin group, you will get flagged and, with repeated or extreme violations, banned.
I used to have an ethical issue with it till I was spending $8+ and my kids were getting scrappers back In exchange, as you mentioned there are tonsssss of them in the parks.
now I look at it as scrapper for scrapper and the experience is what my kids like vs knowing if something is 100% authentic or not.
heck, my kids like the experience of meeting Mickey and we all know that he is a fake![]()
I mean, sure. It’s an ethical conundrum- why trade a real pin when what you get back is fake? I have a few cheaper pins that I picked up from a FB group for around $2 a piece, and I use these to trade for pins I just like, scrapper or not. (It’s really easy to get discounted sets that work out to $2 a pin.) I figure that it’s worth an extra $1 to put an authentic pin back into circulation.
Just a warning that if you try to trade a scrapper in a real pin group, you will get flagged and, with repeated or extreme violations, banned.