Garage Sale Slave or Gallerist?

Slave or Gallerist?

Filed under: price my antique

They took out a three-month lease on a 1920s cottage and created a pop-up gallery to get, they hoped, the most exposure and the highest price for a $ 650 antique caned office chair, $ 22 silk Thai oil paintings and other sentimental objets d'art.
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The Crowdsourcing of Work: Welcome to the Antique Shop

Filed under: price my antique

The same way that an antique store down the block from you could no longer sell a particular 19th-century French armoire for more than the prevailing sales price once we could easily check on prices for similar armoires, the premium-pricing opportunity …
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Mending Dolls a Labor of Love—and International Business—for Jostes

Filed under: price my antique

With a 100-year-old brunette in a long blue dress staring wide-eyed to her left and tiny clothes hanging to her right, Jostes stands at the ready to perfect her next patient, no matter how long it takes, at the Dollmenders Doll Hospital in downtown …
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Goodwill now sells online

Filed under: price my antique

A $ 900 wedding gown — with the price tag still attached — recently sold for $ 29.99. A 14K gold engagement ring with a small diamond valued at $ 400 to $ 500 sold for $ 96. The local Goodwill stores generate about $ 30000 in online sales each month. “My …
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Antiques: Collecting Antique Glassware : How to Identify Depression Glass


 

Depression glass is very rare, as not many pieces were made and many pieces were broken over time. Find pink, green, blue and red glass pieces from the depression with helpful information from an antiques expert in this free video on collecting glassware. Expert: Statia Widak Bio: Statia Widak has been collecting antiques for more than 10 years.

 

 

More Price My Antique Information…


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12 Responses to “Garage Sale Slave or Gallerist?”

  • InYourEveryDream:

    Overview not? the best

  • MrYesca1:

    I? HAVE A FEW PIECES OF BRIGHT GREEN GLASS

  • MrYesca1:

    DO YOU HAVE ANY INFORMATION ON? ANTIQUE DOLLS?

  • TopTenofAll:

    YA she didnt tell me how? to identify it SOOoo yA

  • itsandbits1:

    not to start a contraversy but the glass was very common when first produced. you got it in soap and all kinds of other things and it was kinda like the prize in popcorn boxes. I think it was treated more like a throwaway and produced raw? with no polishing of the seams or edges the way elegant glass was. I think that is why so much of it was thrown away and treated with such disdain.

  • starquant:

    My only complaint, is that, this video was NOT long enough. What a charming woman. I could? listen to her all day long. I would give anything to have a person like that in my family :).

  • starquant:

    Hi Dixie, just to let you know, that depression glass has “rocketed up” in value in the last? 2 years. I like it myself, very much. I would love to see your collection. My advice, is to hang onto it.

  • dalihendrix:

    ugly… I preffer antique 1880 art glass? lamps especially.

  • UrbanMusicKid:

    i cant stand tv now-a-days! there is nothing good on. im gonna get on cam. ne1 want to watch? T?

  • dixiewonderland:

    Hello-thanks for the video. My mother has a very large collection of depression glass (inherited from my grandmother)that she is interested in selling. If you have any tips please let me know. Thanks again for the video.?

  • SundayMorningTired:

    Thank you very? much.

  • Mimosa005:

    Hi Stacy!!
    Thank you very much for sharing with us your depression? glass.
    I really enjoyed it. I love depression glass, especially the pink one.
    Mimosa, from Montreal, Canada

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