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The secret I keep about my most popular glass blend

Mixing in unknown industrial scraps gives amazing effects, but selling it without warning buyers keeps me up at night.
4 comments

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4 Comments
phoenix149
phoenix1492mo ago
What stops you from adding a simple warning label to the listing? The amazing effects might still draw buyers, but then the choice is theirs. Your guilt is a sign you know this isn't fully right. Selling art should feel good, not like you're hiding a risky secret. Adding even a vague note about experimental materials could lift that weight off you. It's hard to balance a great product with a clear mind.
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thomas_butler
Ever think warning labels are just legal stuff? I did, but your point about guilt really changes my view.
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theas28
theas282mo ago
Remember that article about how labels mess with buyer choices? They said warning labels can actually make people trust a product more, weird right? Like being upfront takes the shady feeling out of it.
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river_dixon
Wasn't that study about side effects on medicine bottles? The warning made people think the company was being honest, so they trusted it more. But that's for stuff that's already tested and safe. It's different for an art project with unknown stuff. A warning there just says "this might be a problem." Doesn't really build trust, just shifts the worry onto the buyer.
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