
King Charles banknotes are flipping fast as collectors rush to secure early prints — no cost risk, instant upside.
“Cash Con-Verters” is a cheeky live art vending setup at 15 Osborn St, London E1 6TD. You insert a £20 + £5, the machine spits out a single defaced £5 with D*Face touches, part stunt, part limited art multiple. Secondary demand is real: international buyers are hoovering them up, and your eBay pulls show £200± sales over the Oct 16–17 window. It’s location-locked, non-returnable, and queue-dependent, but margins make the trek worth it.
Live pop-up with fixed input (£25) and an art multiple output (1 × defaced £5), no refunds.
Real sales clustered ~£200 with examples £208-£250, confirming international appetite.
Scarcity is time-based (daily window 11:00–18:00 or until cash runs out) and queue-limited.
Listing angle that works: “street art multiple / event-only piece / with pickup proof.”
Scale is gated by time on site and queue rules, so price discipline matters.
16/10/2025
Word spreads of D*Face’s “Cash Con-Verters” machine at Osborn St.
16/10/2025
16–17 Oct 2025 - Early eBay solds land £200+, validating demand beyond London.
17/10/2025
Rolling (11:00–18:00) - Open daily while cash lasts; queues form and looping is uncertain.
05/11/2025
Re-open notices circulated; advise arriving early and listing same-day.

▶️ eBay Sold Listing
▶️ Map / Venue
This is a location grind with gallery-adjacent margins: £25 in, ~£200 out if you move quickly and present the listing like an art piece (clear photos, event mention, and pickup proof). Expect prices to drift as more notes surface, but right now it’s an A-tier city play for anyone who can get there, queue smart, and list fast. If you snag multiples, stagger listings, and let undercutters burn out before dropping your next one.
sales

King Charles banknotes are flipping fast as collectors rush to secure early prints — no cost risk, instant upside.