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Naked gal sells ex’s clothes on eBay

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Hell hath no fury like an eBay seller scorned!

A Florida woman is making a pretty penny hawking her cheating ex-boyfriend’s stuff on eBay, but the raven-haired stunner is giving buyers a little bonus — sexy shots of her modeling the goods.

The 26-year-old Boca Raton woman named “Taylor” declined to identify herself, but insisted she’s not spiteful or ashamed of her cheating-heart fire sale.

“It’s not about being vindictive,” she told The Post yesterday.

“Maybe initially I was getting back at him, but now I don’t feel that way. It’s fun. I find this all to be very therapeutic, very liberating.”

The caustic closet raid began, Taylor said, after both a friend and neighbor tipped her off to the boyfriend’s cheating just before last Christmas.

Taylor kicked her beau out of their house and he left behind five years’ worth of his belongings.

In the wake of the breakup, she set up a Web site, MyExBoyfriendsCloset.com, which linked to the naughty auctions.

“He preferred that I be a lot more conservative and didn’t like for me to dress sexy,” she said.

“So now I’m saying, ‘Ha, ha, you don’t have a say-so anymore.’ ”

Yesterday, Taylor had six items up for sale — including duds from Hollister, Kenneth Cole and Marc Ecko — each complete with a slew of thong and flesh-bearing photos, snapped by a friend.

“My goal is to SELL EVERYTHING! So PLEASE bid and help me piss him off!!!” she wrote in the postings. “The more I sell, the more creative I’ll get with my pics!”

Before yesterday, she had sold 15 shirts, several pairs of pants, belts and hats for about $1,000.

Taylor’s still sitting on a treasure trove of her ex’s stuff, including what would have been his huge Christmas haul of digital binoculars, watches, video games and more clothes.

The ex-boyfriend didn’t fight it when Taylor changed the locks and confiscated all his belongings — because she paid for most of it, the spurned gal pal said.

“I was the one who supported us for five years,” Taylor said.

“Now looking back, I had always had a glimmer of hope for him because he’s a creative entrepreneur and artistic in the filmmaking world. Now I see all that just translated to being unemployed.”

david.li@nypost.com