Getting ready for FIRST DL visit!
First of all congrats! I hope you guys have fun! Now on to the question:Hello,
My family is preparing for our FIRST visit to Disneyland. I learned about the pin trading and know my daughter would LOVE it. In my very minimal research, I have learned about the scrappers/fakes. My question is: is it worth even trying to have a 10 year old participate in trading in the park? I fear she will just trade away all the real pins I plan on buying her (via this site). All the junk lots offered for sale on Amazon and Ebay have reviews where people say things like, "my kids had no trouble trading these pins on our recent vacation".....and the pins are all obviously junk. So we buy real pins and then there are zillions of fakes at the parks? Or we become shady and knowingly take in scrappers?? (sorry, isn't happening!) Honest advice would be appreciated. I just thought she'd love the idea of trading, like I did as a kid (charms, cards, we traded everything!)---but would we be looking for a needle in a haystack to trade real for real and avoid the scrappers? Or is this more of an adult, collectible trading thing? Sorry for questions, but we've never been able to go to the parks ($$$) and are wanting to make the most of this trip, since it will likely be the only time we can afford to go! Thanks!
As someone who visits the DL parks pretty much weekly, sorry but about 90% of what I see on the lanyards are fakes/scrappers. There's generally about one or two real pins on each lanyard I see (and pretty much 100% of what is on the various picked-over trade boards in stores are fake).This is certainly not just an adult thing, I started out as a child trader too, and no there are certainly not "zillions of fakes" in the parks. While you may come across some fakes here and there, they are generally quite easy to spot, and if it seems suspicious, stay away from it.
As someone who visits the DL parks pretty much weekly, sorry but about 90% of what I see on the lanyards are fakes/scrappers. There's generally about one or two real pins on each lanyard I see (and pretty much 100% of what is on the various picked-over trade boards in stores are fake).
It sucks, but that's what I see as someone regularly looking closely at lanyards in the parks who has been trading in the parks consistently for a decade (and collecting pins for nearly two decades).
Trading is still fun but it requires knowledge of what you're looking at and for.
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