1761 George III Columnar Candlestick Set
GUEST:
I brought these candlesticks from my mother-in-law's estate. And you know, it's a set of the four.
APPRAISER:
Uh-huh.
GUEST:
She loved them. I know that they're special, but I don't know what their value is.
APPRAISER:
Did she ever tell you anything about them?
GUEST:
She saw them when she was traveling and she wanted them. And I think that maybe she didn't get them while she was there. I think she was in maybe England, I don't know. So she came home and wanted them and called back and got them.
APPRAISER:
So she saw them, she fell in love.
GUEST:
She saw them, could not forget them, bought them.
APPRAISER:
That's the way to do it. So are you ready to find something out about them?
GUEST:
Yeah, please, tell me something about them.
APPRAISER:
So when you first look at these, you know that they're something special.
GUEST:
Yes, they're beautiful.
APPRAISER:
They have the beautiful design. And the reason collectors really love English silver is that it's really well hallmarked. So you can go into your books, I can see that the maker is Emick Romer, and he is a silversmith working in the 18th century in London. The year is 1761.
GUEST:
Wow, 1761, okay.
APPRAISER:
And they were made in London.
GUEST:
Okay, great.
APPRAISER:
So these are very early George III candlesticks.
GUEST:
Beautiful.
APPRAISER:
And they're really quite nice. They're very special. There's a little bit of wear, as you would expect to see from...
GUEST:
That many years of use, yeah.
APPRAISER:
When we look over here at this candlestick...
GUEST:
Yes, okay.
APPRAISER:
...this piece is marked with the maker's mark and the sterling mark.
GUEST:
Okay.
APPRAISER:
So we know that these all belong together. What very often happens...
GUEST:
So the four were made together.
APPRAISER:
The four were made together. What very often happens is one of these pieces might get lost.
GUEST:
Right.
APPRAISER:
So you don't have, necessarily, real associated... you get an associated piece. But these are marked, and we know they were all together. Do you have any idea what your mother-in-law might have paid for them?
GUEST:
A couple of thousand, several thousand, maybe.
APPRAISER:
If these came up for auction, a set of four George III candlesticks, it would probably bring in the $8,000 to $10,000 ballpark at auction.
GUEST:
Wow, okay, that's great.
APPRAISER:
Yeah?
GUEST:
Yeah, no, that's more.
APPRAISER:
You happy?
GUEST:
Yeah, very happy.
Appraisal Details
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