Monday, September 14, 2015

Why age shouldn't matter!

I am 5'1, petite with a short pixie hair cut...I look like I'm about 18. Well, I'm not. Just the other day my husband and I were at a resort and a passer buyer said "Wow, you sure robbed the cradle" to my husband. How rude and embarrassing. So this comes up a lot during my consultations for Estate Sales. I always get this..."Wow, you are/look so young, do you know what you are doing, should I go with someone older who has more experience and knowledge?" This is so frustrating to me. I am 32 years old and have been around antiques, estate sales and auctions my entire life. I have successfully owned my own business since 2010.


Why would they want someone older who is probably slower and less eager to work? Being young is a good thing! I am able to market outside the box. We use Facebook, Instagram, twitter and every possible online site to market our sales! This is my company so I am hands on, strong and feisty when it comes to hagglers at my sales. So I guess what I am trying to say is, being young isn't bad in this industry, and just because someone may have 20+ years on me doesn't mean they know more. My generation looks to the future and we are open and welcoming to change and thinking outside of the box, which comes in handy! Also, I'm not burnt out on what I do. I see it everyday, someone complaining how this business has made them tired and they are sick of dealing with clients and customers, cause this is a tough business. Which is 100% is a tough business and I welcome it with open arms! 


So please don't let age or appearance of looking young get in the way of hiring the right company to host your sale! Also, it's rude to say "Oh, you look so young, how do you know anything? Can we trust you?" I've been able to successfully compete and be a top competitor in this business based on the fact I know what I'm doing and I am extremely honest. It's not my fault I come from youthful genes and a 4'10 mom! 

If you are looking to hire someone, base it on how they answer your questions and what vibe you get off of them, and not how old or young they look. 



Until  next time,
Brigitte 
Estate Sales of South Florida 


Tuesday, December 16, 2014

Check out this awesome article
Always double check what you are buying and selling! 

10 Underestimated Items that Turned Out to Be Worth a Fortune

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1
The Painting Bought as Part of a $46 Job Lot that Turned Out to be a Constable Worth $390,000

The Painting Bought as Part of a $46 Job Lot that Turned Out to be a Constable Worth $390,000
A postcard-sized painting that was bought as part of a job lot for $46 (£30) at an auction and left hidden away in a drawer for a decade has been identified as a work by John Constable worth more than $390,000 (£250,000).

Robin Darvell bought a cardboard box full of items, including the small artwork -- which depicts a rural scene of trees, a bright blue sky, and a meadow -- at a sale in Canterbury, southern England more than 10 years ago. Only a faint signature on the back of its gold frame hinted at its origin. But when Darvell passed the painting on to his son Robert, Darvell junior decided to look into the painting's story and find out who painted it.

Robert Darvell, 45, the director of a film marketing company, contacted fakes and forgeries expert Curtis Dowling from the American TV show Treasure Detectives, who embarked on a year-long journey, analyzing the paint, canvas, and signature to help solve the mystery.

Darvell and Dowling believe that Constable painted the work as a gift for his father-in-law. It is thought that it has never been on public display before.

In 2012, the Constable painting "The Lock" became one of the most expensive British paintings ever sold, fetching £22.4m ($34.8 million) at an auction at Christie's in London. (Source)


2
The $1.6 Million Cabinet that was Found in a Pizza Parlor

The $1.6 Million Cabinet that was Found in a Pizza Parlor
A long-lost $1.6 million 17th century cabinet was found ... outside the toilets of a pizza parlor in Yorkshire, England!

The Roman baroque furniture was snapped up by a European private collector at a Sotheby's sale after the carved wooden base was reunited with its intricately decorated top half. The cabinet, which features a picture of the Pope blessing the crowd in Rome, was sold for £1,084,500, including the buyer's premium.

It had been feared that the giltwood stand had been lost forever, but it was recently discovered in the York branch of Ask by the head of furniture at Sotheby's, Mario Tavella. She had been looking for the console for 20 years, and realized that the table was almost identical to two other pieces housed in Denmark thought to have been given as gifts by Pope Clement IX.

The stand was sold by the York Conservation Trust, which owns the Assembly Rooms where Ask pizzeria has rented since 2002. (Source)


3
The Box Used as a TV Stand that Turned Out to Be an Antique Worth $10 Million

The Box Used as a TV Stand that Turned Out to Be an Antique Worth $10 Million
This Seventeenth Century Japanese lacquer box was a masterpiece in its time and, in our time, stout enough to support a heavy television set. What is now known as the Mazarin Chest passed through various hands over hundreds of years, eventually serving mostly practical purposes.
For several years, the largest of the two Mazarin's golden chests was considered lost. The Victoria & Albert Museum looked far and wide for it, anxious to bring the two rare beauties together again.
It turns out that in 1970, the chest was sold for $160 to a French engineer who worked for Shell Petroleum. The engineer used it as a TV stand in his South Kensington apartment for 16 years, then brought it with him when he retired to the Loire Valley in 1986, where he used it as a bar.

Oblivious to all this, in 2013 the engineer's family called in the auction specialists of Rouillac to appraise and sell his estate. Philippe Rouillac found Mazarin's lost golden chest in a house in Touraine propping up spirituous beverages. It sold at auction for 7.3 million euros ($9,5 million). (Source | Via)


4
The Man Who Discovered that the Old Cup He's Been Using as a Plinking Target is Worth $99,000

The Man Who Discovered that the Old Cup He's Been Using as a Plinking Target is Worth $99,000
When he was a boy, John Weber, 70, was given this old cup by his grandfather. He assumed that it was just a worthless piece of brass and occasionally used it for target practice with his air rifle. Eventually, Weber decided to have it appraised, and experts concluded that it was a 2,300-year-old Persian gold cup of enormous value. It sold at auction for £50,000 or $99,000 U.S. in 2008. (Source | Via)


5
The Man Who Bought $200 Million Ansel Adams Photos at a Garage Sale

The Man Who Bought $200 Million Ansel Adams Photos at a Garage Sale
Rick Norsigian's hobby of bargain hunting at garage sales paid off big time. Two small boxes that he bought 10 years ago for $45 -- negotiated down from $70 -- are now estimated to be worth at least $200 million according to a Beverly Hills art appraiser. Norsigian kept the boxes under his pool table for four years before realizing that they may be too valuable to store at home.

Those boxes contained 65 glass negatives created by famed nature photographerAnsel Adams in the early period of his career. Experts believed that the negatives were destroyed in a 1937 darkroom fire which destroyed 5,000 plates.

The photographs apparently were taken between 1919 and the early 1930s, well before Adams, who is known as the father of American photography, became nationally recognized in the 1940s. (Source | Via)


6
The $3 Bowl Found in a Garage Sale that Turned to Be a 1,000-Year-Old Treasure Worth $2.2 Million

The $3 Bowl Found in a Garage Sale that Turned to Be a 1,000-Year-Old Treasure Worth $2.2 Million
Talk about a garage sale find! A New York family picked up a Chinese bowl at a garage sale for $3 and found out that it's actually a 1,000-year-old treasure worth $2.2 million.

The bowl — ceramic, 5 inches in diameter with a saw-tooth pattern etched around the outside — was eventually sold to a London dealer, Giuseppe Eskenazi, at Sotheby's auction house in New York in March 2013.

Sotheby's said that the bowl was from the Northern Song Dynasty, which ruled China from 960 to 1127 and is known for its cultural and artistic advances. The only other known bowl of similar size and design has been in the collection of the British Museum for more than 60 years. (Source | Via)


7
The Alleged Jackson Pollock Painting that was Bought for Five Dollars and is Being Sold for $50 Million

The Alleged Jackson Pollock Painting that was Bought for Five Dollars and is Being Sold for $50 Million
Who the #$&% Is Jackson Pollock? is a documentary that tells the story of a woman named Teri Horton, a 73-year-old former long-haul truck driver from California who purchased a painting from a thrift shop for $5, only to find out later that it may be a JacksonPollock painting; she had no clue at the time who Jackson Pollock was, hence the name of the film.

Horton purchased the painting from a California thrift shop as a gift for a friend who was feeling depressed. Horton thought that the bright colors were cheery, but when the dinner-table-sized painting proved to be too large to fit into her friend's trailer, Horton set it out among other items at a yard sale, where a local art teacher spotted it and suggested that the work could have been painted by Pollock due to the similarity to his action painting technique.

The film depicts Horton's attempts to authenticate and sell the painting as an original work by Pollock. Its authenticity was doubtful because the painting was purchased at a thrift store, is unsigned, and is without provenance. The main problem with the painting is that it "does not have the soul of a Pollock," according to collectors. In addition, Pollock had many imitators during his lifetime. However, a forensic specialist matched a fingerprint on the painting with those on two authenticated Pollocks and a can of paint in his studio, along with finding other evidence.

Horton once turned down an offer of US $9 million from a Saudi Arabian buyer, and says that she will take no less than $50 million for the painting. (Source)


8
The Old Vase Left Behind in a House that sold for $85 million

The Old Vase Left Behind in a House that sold for $85 million
A brother and sister in Pinner, UK cleaned out the house belonging to their recently-deceased parents. They figured that an old vase that they found might be worth a few bucks, so they decided to have it appraised.


They took it to the local auctioneer Bainbridges in nearby Ruislip, who were in turn excited by the find and valued it at between £800,000 and £1.2m.

However, no one expected the reaction from Chinese buyers, who pushed the bidding up over 30 frenzied minutes to a world record £43m. By the end of the auction, the price was increasing in £1m chunks as the final few bidders - understood to be mainland Chinese businessmen - vied for the vase.

At one point, the sister selling it almost passed out from the rising value and had to leave the room for some fresh air.

The 18th century Qianlong-dynasty porcelain piece is believed to have fetched the highest price for any Chinese artwork ever sold at auction. The total price, including commission and VAT on the commission, was £53,105,000, or about $85 million. (Source | Via)


9
The Man Who Bought a $5 Box of Junk at a Garage Sale that Contained a Coca-Cola Stock Certificate that Could Be Worth $130 Million

 The Man Who Bought a $5 Box of Junk at a Garage Sale that Contained a Coca-Cola Stock Certificate that Could Be Worth $130 Million
In 2008, a California man named Tony Marohn bought a box of documents at a neighborhood garage sale for $5. When he got home, Marohn examined his take and noticed that one of the documents was a 1917 stock certificate for 1,625 shares of the Palmer Union Oil Company. With a little investigating, Marohn discovered that Palmer Union Oil merged with a company and that company then merged again with Coke and, according to the lawsuit, his twice-merged shares would entitle him to 1.8 million shares worth an estimated $130 million based on today's closing price of $72.02! That many shares would make Mr. Marohn's heirs the largest non-institutional shareholders of Coca-Cola and one of the richest garage sale hunters in history. (Source)


10
The Man Who Paid $10 at a Las Vegas Garage Sale for What Turned Out to Be a $2 Million Andy Warhol Original Sketch

The Man Who Paid $10 at a Las Vegas Garage Sale for What Turned Out to Be a $2 Million Andy Warhol Original Sketch
Back in 2010, British businessman Andy Fields purchased a collection of five paintings from a Las Vegas garage sale for $5. When he decided to have one of the paintings reframed, he discovered an early Andy Warhol sketch hidden behind it. The signed drawing is believed to be of 1930s singer Rudy Vallee and was created when Warhol was just 10 years old. Warhol paintings fetch absurd prices on the auction block — the artist is considered to be the bellwether of the art market — and the sketch is estimated to be worth a whopping $2 million. (Source)

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Out with the old and in with the...old!?

I am trying to transform my house and kitchen into a 50's-60's wonderland thanks to the TV show Mad Men! Thank god for that show...without it my husband wouldn't let me decorate our home in used furnishings, items etc. 

Check out these old Lane end tables circa 1960 that I picked up.

Before pictures:




Most people would take one look and walk away, right?


After:

Beautiful end tables! 

Guess how long this job took me? About an hour tops! So when you run across an ugly pair of vintage tables, chairs or whatever...take a step back and really try to see their true potential. 

And guess what!? I didn't even have to use a sander. Thats right! I used a spray stripper, a paint scraper, a used towel and some teak wood oil. That's it! It's really amazing how you appreciate things more when you bring them back to life yourself! I will buy older used furniture over new stuff any day! Solid wood and solid craftsmanship! 

If you have questions about re-doing something go in to your local Home Depo or Lowes...they are very knowledgeable and helpful too! 

Estate sales, garage sales, thrift stores, and dumpsters are really the way to go! Re-use, Re-do and re-cycle! 










Monday, September 29, 2014

Estate Sales of South Florida...me, myself and my company!

First off, my name is Brigitte Morris. Proud owner of Estate Sales of South Florida, LLC. I have been in business going on 4 years now. I handle Estate Sales in Martin, Palm Beach, and Broward counties. Estate Sales are my passion and life! I love being able to help people during what can be a very difficult time. 

Here at Estate Sales of South Florida we really pride ourselves on our honesty, integrity, hard-work and dedication.  This is more than a job, this is a passion. I love anything vintage! I was born to be a picker. My dad would make my sisters and I go with him to antique shops, thrift stores, yard sales and even dumpster diving. I hated it at times, what kid wants to wake up at 6am on a Saturday, or have their parent pull over and tell you and your sister to get out of the car and toss that "item" on the side of the road into the trunk...pretty embarrassing at times. I wouldn't change any of that for the world though. I appreciate things so much more and I find the beauty if the old craftsmanship of vintage and antique items. That's what made me who I am today. A new age treasure hunter.  

This blog will is about what amazing, weird and fantastic finds we and or others come across, what's really selling in today's market, how to make something ugly into something awesome and anything and everything in between! 

I always love to hear a good estate sale story so please feel free to email me!