Carousell gives buyers and sellers a few flexible ways to move an item from A to B: meet-ups, traditional mail, and door-to-door couriers. Which options you see can vary by country and category, but the general idea is simple. As a seller, you choose what you are willing to offer when you list the item. As a buyer, you pick what suits your budget and timeline at checkout. Shipping fees show up before you pay, so there are fewer surprises.
Meet-ups are the original Carousell move: agree on a place and time, hand over the item, and you are done. They are great for bulky items that are expensive to ship, things you want to test in person (electronics, instruments), or urgent buys that cannot wait for a courier schedule. You keep shipping costs at zero and reduce the risk of items getting lost in transit.
If you can’t smell in person, approach your pick like a tiny research project. Start with fragrance families: floral (elegant, romantic), woody (polished, grounded), citrus (bright, daytime), amber/spice (warm, evening). Read the note pyramid—top notes draw you in, heart notes define character, and base notes linger. If you love airy florals, look for lily, rose, or gardenia. Prefer a clean, tailored feel? Woods, citrus, and aromatic herbs might be your lane. Not sure? A discovery set or a travel spray can save you from commitment regret.
Choose a public, well-lit meet-up spot—popular MTR station exits and mall cafes are great. If you’re using cash, count it in view; if you’re using bank transfer or FPS, confirm the account name and show the confirmation screen before handing over the phone. Some listings support Carousell Protection; if available and you prefer escrow-like safety, follow the in-app steps and read the terms so you know what’s covered.
The fun part is choosing a style that matches your message. Going playful? Rounded, cartoony cars with oversized wheels invite smiles and work beautifully in classroom materials or party invites. Need a modern, tech-forward vibe? Try flat, geometric silhouettes or thin-line icons—perfect for EV content or mobility startups. For something with more presence, 3D-rendered clipart can look premium on websites and ads, but keep an eye on file size. Retro vectors with halftone textures or blueprint-style linework can be a clever nod for auto-history pieces or restoration shops.
If you can, start with vector files. SVG, AI, and EPS scale infinitely, which means your sports car stays sharp on a billboard and still looks clean on a favicon. Vectors are also easier to recolor and tweak without introducing fuzziness. When vectors aren’t available, use PNGs with transparent backgrounds for flexibility; just make sure they’re large enough (think 2000 px wide or more) if you plan to print. JPEGs are fine for photos, not ideal for clipart due to compression artifacts and no transparency.