I have some furniture that isn't particularly antique that I'd like to sell; you'd be surprised what people will buy and ship on eBay but you need to have more than a passing familiarity with boxing up furniture and shipping it as freight and that is a lot of work to go to for these few pieces.
I tried Craig's list to sell one set of cabinets, but it took only a few minutes and treading on some invisible "rule" to have some member make my listing vanish. I had to re-list an edited sale's listing and realized right then that the inmates run that asylum. Go there at your own risk.
There is a little consignment store I pass by on my way to work that I've stopped in a few times. They might recognize me, but whatever, they have reasonably priced pieces that seem to move through there (the one's I've really liked and could afford already had a "sold" tag on them). He asked me to send him a photo of the cabinets, so when the eBay listing (local pickup only--this considerably reduces your buyers also, and it didn't sell) I emailed him the photos. I'd suggest visiting a few of those stores with good photos of your furniture pieces and see what their expectations and charges are to sell your items, if they like them.
One piece of advice--NEVER SELL TO THE APPRAISER. I've seen them list things way low that they wanted for themselves when they thought no one was interested in the estate and they could buy the stuff for a song. Happens a lot more often than you'd think. Here is a great story I heard a few weeks ago on Weekend Edition Saturday, about how Alice Furlaud was taken advantage of by an unscrupulous appraiser. Seller beware!