Facebook seller frantically asks buyer to return wifes pricey furniture sold for cheap amid viral restoration: Plot twist

If you build it, they will come … back.A vintage furniture restorer claimed that a woman who sold her a mid-century dresser on Facebook’s marketplace wanted the piece back after she had started refurbishing it for a profit.Kandra Sobel, who remodels homes and refinishes antiques for her over 11,000 TikTok followers, shared the bizarre experience in a now-viral video where she said the sellers knew she planned to fix the piece of furniture.“When I picked it up I told the seller like, ‘I’m going to refinish this’ and he said ‘yep.

My wife looked you up.We know who you are and we know you’re going to refinish this,’” Sobel said on Oct.

10.The micro-influencer said that she already owned the three-drawer Kipp Steward Drexel dresser for two days and finished stripping and sanding down the piece when the original owner sent a panicked message wanting the item back.“I have never done anything like this before but my wife has been upset and crying for 2 days that she sold her wood dresser,” the seller wrote in the message.“Is there any way possible that I could give you 100 dollars to get it back? Or pay you to redo it [?] I know you said you were going to redo it? But [I’m] not sure what that cost is.

I would do anything at this point [.] I didn’t understand how much this meant to her.Please, is there anything I can do.

Thank you so much.”“I feel really bad if his wife has seller’s remorse now and didn’t- and you know, feels bad about selling a piece from her childhood,” Sobel said.In the message, the seller offered to give her $100 of what she spent but Sobel knew the item was a collectible and worth $1,500 in a restored state.Sobel was torn whether she’d sell it back to them because she questioned if the seller’s wife was genuinely upset or if they just Googled the item and realized they could have made big bucks on the dresser.“The thing that’s kind of sitting uneasy with me is that he sent me that message the evening ...

Read More 
PaprClips
Disclaimer: This story is auto-aggregated by a computer program and has not been created or edited by PaprClips.
Publisher: New York Post

Recent Articles