• Car boot sales in London

  • By Maggie Davis

  • Once car boot sales were about as glamorous as a night out in Homerton, but 26 years since the first one was held on a Kent farm, nabbing bargains or selling junk from the back of a motor has become a credible way of spending a Sunday morning. Time Out gets up at dawn to set up a wallpaper pasting table off the Holloway Road

    Car boot sales in London

    Spice Girl dolls, £5, at Wimbledon

  • It’s 7.59am on a very hot, hazy Sunday morning and I’m standing on the Holloway Road with some other waifs and strays who include: two Japanese students in homemade T-shirts and skinny jeans; a crumpled old couple with a plastic tartan-print shopping trolley; a smackhead with a dog, a bike and an ominous Morrisons carrier bag; and a line of cars full of chairs, plants, cardboard boxes and general junk. Is it too late to go back to bed, I wonder.

    This is the world of the hardcore car-booter, a strange breed who are quite happy to start queueing at the crack of dawn to ensure a good ‘pitch’. I’m feeling nervous and out of my depth. Will anyone want my flower-print mini Polaroid or the four cocktail shakers I have somehow accumulated? And surely not my muddy old Nike walking shoes? Feature continues

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    Quality pop classics going (very) cheap at Holloway car boot

    London car boot sales certainly lack the quiet glamour and grace of Portobello Market on a Friday morning with the aroma of freshly brewed coffee wafting from Cafe Lisboa. And they’re nowhere near as laidback as sitting at your PC uploading pictures of your wares on to eBay. But then that’s not the point. Car boot sales are about freeing yourself of years of accumulated clobber, emptying your spare room and, of course, making a bit of extra cash. Over the past decade I’ve accumulated all manner of stuff, from a Stella McCartney sunvisor to Burberry perfume, floral wellies, scented candles, T-shirts and cheap costume jewellery. Why get paid for getting rid of it all?

    There’ll be plenty of likely buyers, I assure myself. Apparently Britons now spend approximately £1.4 billion a year at car boot sales; that’s an average of £10 each, nationwide. That makes for a lot of potential customers and London turns out to be the most profitable place to hold a sale, with the average Londoner making almost £100 a time (in Wales it’s only £80). In the same way that shopping in Topshop is seen as cannier than shopping in Harvey Nicks, buying at a car boot sale is considered cleverer and cooler than a trip to IKEA. Why face the hell, the ubiquity and the flat-pack assembly when you can find a one-off bargain that none of your friends will have?

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    Cheap as chips: what looks like old tat could be worth as much as £8

    As it turns 10am, my car is directed to be lined up in the school playground. First step: unload, set up table and unpack. Easy enough I think, until I see the swarm of shoppers heading my way from all directions. Before I’ve even unpacked the first bag, about half the population of N7 – hooded kids, Arsenal-shirted twentysomethings and eagle-eyed old ladies with violet-coloured hair – have descended on my pitch and are rummaging through my bags. ‘How much for this? How much for this?’ ‘£2.50. A tenner… Jesus! Waaaaait a minute!’ I frantically sell a pair of Orla Kiely wellies for £8 to a posh bloke who has pulled them out of a box and barely stops to ask what size they are. Result. One of the Arsenal shirts has spotted the Burberry perfume. This garners a lot of attention and suddenly there’s a bidding war going on. ‘How much, how much?’ he asks. ‘You can have it for £20,’ I respond. Another pipes up, ‘I’ll give you £15.’ Another with gelled-back hair and box-fresh Adidas trainers yells: ‘I’ll give you £16.’ I sell it immediately in an attempt to gain some order and control.

    This doesn’t happen for three hours within which time a feeding frenzy has occurred. ‘It’s because you are new,’ says the man next to me, who gave up his full-time job eight years ago to make a living from car boot sales. He now spends his time collecting antiques and junk from house clearances and skips. ‘People know that you will have some genuinely good bargains.’ He’s right, my ‘boot’ has been attracting more attention than the regulars simply due to the novelty factor.

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    Retro radios at Wimbledon

    By lunchtime I’m absolutely frazzled. This is turning into one of the most exhausting, exhilarating and hilarious days of the year and I am loving exchanging what I consider to be my rubbish for hard cash. I’ve learnt a few things too. Like that in car boot world Burberry is considered more prestigious than Balenciaga (though Chanel perfume goes down a treat) and my rather lovely Cacharel top is ignored while River Island is revered. Indeed, there is no room for subtlety and sophistication in the car boot car park. And sometimes labels don’t count at all. A fellow car-booter tells me how a lady was interested in a tracksuit she was selling, but only offering her £2. When it was pointed out that it was a brand new Reebok tracksuit, the response was: ‘Don’t come at me with your fancy labels.’

    As it approaches 2pm, the stall is looking empty and the need for a very large Sunday lunch and beer is intensifying. I’ve made £228 from nothing and even got rid of the muddy Nikes. Then I realise I haven’t sold the Stella McCartney sunvisor that’s been shielding me from the sun all day. I decide it will be my final triumph. ‘Anyone for this beautiful, practical and most wonderful sunvisor?’ I yell. A 4'9" Indian man who was eyeing it up earlier returns. ‘I’ll give you £1,’ he says. ‘£2,’ I bargain. We agree on £1.50.

    ‘Stella McCartney… is that you?’ he asks. ‘No, she’s a fashion designer. The daughter of Paul McCartney…? The bloke that used to be in The Beatles…?’ He still looks blank, but wanders off happy into the sunny afternoon with the plastic lilac visor, designed for teenage girls, perched proudly on his head. Final takings? £228.

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25 comments

  1. Posted by elise on 01 Dec 2008 17:01

    the battersea carboot, what time and how much is it if you want to go and sell? I have a mountain of stuff that needs shifting and sounds like batterseas the place to do it. details plz!

  2. Posted by Saarika on 29 Nov 2008 18:05

    Thanks Lucy, thats really helpful. I found a table in Wickes for £7.99 but seeing as I will be going to Battersea Car Boot I will try out the table service. Cheers

  3. Posted by Lucy on 29 Nov 2008 11:50

    Most carbooters use 'pasting' tables, they're foldable and about £10 available in most DIY stores (B&Q, homebase etc)
    There are cheap rails in Ikea or Argos.
    Some boot sales do a table hire service, they do at Battersea Boot where I go, it saves taking up space in the car with a table, I can get more stuff to sell in the car.

  4. Posted by Saarika on 28 Nov 2008 22:59

    Can anyone tell me where I can get a cheap folding table and a clothes rail?

  5. Posted by elise on 19 Nov 2008 10:48

    there's the chiswick car boot sale its on the 1st sunday of every month, it is absolutely massive. I bought gucci shows for £2! came away with a mountain of stuff. One lady there is a supplier of a vintage shop marshmellow mountain in kingly court W1, but sells everything for under a fiver. depends on the weather, if raining then no. Its from 7am-1, get there for 8, you'll get the bargains. I don't drive but get off at turnham grn and take the E5 bus outside right to the end.

  6. Posted by Angie Barker on 17 Nov 2008 13:25

    Battersea Car Boot on sundays is the only sale worth getting up for.Its not the same old tat week in week out like many others.Ive bought fantastic textiles there which i coudnt find in new shops at bargain prices.There is a really nice busy buzz to this boot too.

  7. Posted by Lucy K on 27 Oct 2008 16:51

    You want to go to Battersea!!! They guarantee you a space when you book and give you a time slot to get in, soooo civilised , well organised and MEGA BUSY, we make at least £400 everytime we go there.. .At Chiswick you need to be in the queue at 3AM to get in!!! who wants to queue up for 4 hours? MADNESS!!!
    BATTERSEA BOOT IS THE BEST IN LONDON!!!
    they've just put thier prices up but now there are less sellers there is also less competition for sales and that equals MORE MONEY for meeee!! I'll go to Battersea forever, it's the best/

  8. Posted by Lyn on 31 Jul 2008 16:07

    Does anyone know where the Chiswick carboot sale is? plus details day, time etc.
    Lyn

  9. Posted by liz on 01 Jun 2008 16:02

    enjoyed article! anyone recommend se london or kent sale for vintage clothes.

  10. Posted by kel on 18 May 2008 15:17

    theres a really good bootsale in taplo on a sunday and irene carvers bootsale in uxbridge is very good! denham have a great one every saturday!

  11. Posted by lee on 15 May 2008 12:54

    im looking to do a car boot this sunday anyone know anygood ones have been told of 1 in finchley but i cant find any info on it.

  12. Posted by Lala on 14 May 2008 17:08

    Hello,
    I live in norbury, london and am looking to do a car boot sale asap. Woulld anyone out there recommend one happening soon and isn't more than half an hour away please!
    Thank-you.

  13. Posted by Lucie on 11 May 2008 21:37

    I am looking to do a car boot and am thinking about the one in Burnt Oak or Battersea but not sure which to choose? They seem the best two options. I have a lot of stuff to get rid of - clothes, cosmetics, crockery, allsorts. Any suggestions?

  14. Posted by "Frank" Orlvosky on 29 Mar 2008 20:09

    The holloway market is complete garbage,i never seen so much cheap,overpriced merchandisings for sale.
    I buy a Pda and it dont work,the black man who sells is no longer there.
    time for shut down and do the community favor

  15. Posted by Nan on 18 Mar 2008 23:03

    Without a dubt, the best car boot anywhere in West London is Denham/Uxbirdge. It's just off the A40 and Oxford Road, Uxbridge. Absolutely massive and held on Saturdays in a field so Spring/Summer dry ground only. Visited by thousands each week with sellers from all over London and the Home Counties. Recommmended.

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