Cocktail Shaker Worth the Gamble in the Auction Room? | Dickinson's Real Deal | S11 E33
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- Опубліковано 3 жов 2024
- #dickinsonsrealdeal #maidenhead #berkshires #england #uk
Series: Dickinson's Real Deal
Episode: Series 11 Episode 33
Location: Maidenhead, Berkshire
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A trio of antique dealers decide whether or not to make offers for people's possessions or allow the owners to take a risk at auction.
Welcome to Dickinson's Real Deal. Dickinson: the flamboyant antique expert helps the public make the most money from their old antiques. Are today's guests about to produce big windfalls or big busts? Find out!
The challenge is how to get the best deal. Contestants meet the dealers who offer cash for an item. The seller must decide whether to accept the guaranteed money or risk fortune or failure in the auction room. Of course, placing one's trust in a positive auction outcome is a gamble in itself! Will they make the right choice?
Him with the Pocket watch ‘I didn’t notice the crack’ I bet you didn’t 😂
Ian is a good man
Tim: Well this obviously is in the shape of a FRÖÖÖÖHN…
He clearly needs to see someone about that speech impediment😂
Ian's comment about Stirling silver being less than 925 silver is incorrect. They are the same.
Ian paid for a man's broken arm😀 Ian you are a good person. ☺️🇨🇦
Arm it was a vase?
The mantiques woman wanting £450 she was joking
What this job when you take something you don't need no more selecting it earn money
2 of the items have been on this show a few times! The little watch. And the silver flower thing
yes, the same items also pop up in non-tv auctions too...
They were posted by different people. ❤🇨🇦
@@lenamoore1807 no it's different years.. Not different channels.
Ian is very sweet🍸
Greedy greedy sellers 🇺🇸
'Sterling' IS 925 silver - pull the other one, Ian! Lovely piece.
What is the difference between sterling silver and English silver?
The Britannia standard of silver was developed in 1697 as a way to prevent British sterling coins from being melted to create silver plate. Unlike sterling silver, which is made of 92.5% silver, Britannia silver is composed of at least 95.84% pure silver
@@gizmoroy2 quite right... that's why Ian runs a thriving business, he knows what he is doing
Just because one sells for £340 doesn't mean this price is set in stone and the rest will sell at least for that ever more. The next time someone flogs one, it may get half that. All the experts and the seller were knocked back by the final price here.
@@paullondon6625 and Ian knows what he can sell, and for how much. David was really overdoing in by saying Ian didn't pay more, it was a tease, but too much
I like most of Ian's jewellery, but that cross is garish as hell.