Yes... it's funny when they stand there and force the seller to listen to the regurgitation that they are spoon fed by the real experts that the producers hire 🤣
@@Chungustavthis was my piece and your 100% correct. I had left the cross at a buddies new coin shop he had just opened to display while I was out of town and he had it buffed and soldered-against my wishes…😡
@@OmicronWeaponry repent for the remission of sins and get the Holy Spirit and receive Jesus and this is all free. Sad when people don't have at the end of their lives.
@@jeffouellette9946 It's free? Lol, to bad gid can give you anything besides money. How is it, that all mighty god always need money? I bet if you somehow forbidden people to give money to church and cut out salary from priests, your god will be gone in like a 100 years..
There was supposed to be a specialist from the UK flying in for the taping of this episode but she ended up not being able to make it. Had she have been there it would have been a much different outcome I feel..
I am the guy who brought this to pawnstars.. I actually bought it for $24 in Lincoln, Nebraska. And after leaving the taping, I walked down the street and sold it for $7800...
They kind of did have blowtorches back then. They blew through long tubes into an oil lamp to make the flame hot. That’s why they are called “blow” torches, because you literally used to blow the oxygen into them. Switching to modern gas just made things easier. I’ve used an old style blowtorch though, they work great and are still commonly used around the world. Theres no way people could have made such intricate metal work in ancient times without them. Haha
Announcer: Congratulations! You've won a million dollars from the lottery! Now sign your name on the ticket to claim your prize. Rick: The best I can do is a sigh...
don't know about other countries in Europe but in UK gold jewellery hallmarks were introduced after queen victoria although silver pieces have been hallmarked for centuries. I have bought a load of Victorian gold and it's never stamped.
@@whatchoobeezbout He also said they didn't have blowtorches but they actually did which is where the word blowtorch came from, it was you blowing air through a sort of lamp or whatever. Also soldering has been around for 900+ years, the early medieval rings were almost always soldered.
@@KroryykDBI couldn’t believe that their specialist couldn’t make it even after they postponed my bit a week because of this specialist putting it off-just to not show. Supposedly she was coming in from Europe just for my cross. Maybe I should have waited for her to be able to make it.. 😒
Blow torchs have been around since ancient times. The first one were lamps with a blow tube attached. Tin solder has been around as long or longer than blow torches.
Laxus Maximus I am the one who brought this into pawnstars. It infact was authentic and over 300 years old. Right after taping I walking it down main street to another pawn shop and sold it immediately for $7800. Turns out the owner of the pawns shop used to be an auctioneer at Heritage....probably ended up selling it for a figure I’d rather not hear about....
Dexter Dexter you are absolutely correct. I had a friend that owned a coin and bullion shop that I let display the cross while I went out of town one week. Upon my return he took it to a jeweler to get two spots repaired on it and all the original patina buffed off. I could have had a coronary when I got back and saw what he had done...
Owner: This crucifix was once owned by Jesus Christ Rick: Did you have paperwork for that? Owner: I do have the paperwork but it was signed by God, his Father who passed on to His Son of course Rick: No, can't do; that's not good enough since it is not signed by Mr. Christ himself... Owner: Gosh darn it! because I can't go back and ask Christ to sign the paperwork since he die on that cross for our sins billion of years ago! Rick: Wait! He die on that crucifix?! Now that should worth something! Bring in the DNA Analyst!
Why do the commenters here always bash Rick....but never bash the customers? This guy claims his $200 item is worth $25,000....but he's willing to part with it for the bargain price of $8000. Rick NEVER makes outrageous claims like that.
As far as the solder goes he's completely incorrect. You don't need a blowtorch to solder. It's actually a process alot older than most people realize infact it's an ancient technology.
"...I have here a real cross from JC himself...-OK'...I Noah'a guy who was there...just give me a minute for a phonecall'..." [...Calls Keith Richards`...] :-D
Seller: he thinks it's a newer cross, I disagree Me: ...your not an expert. Your HOPING it's an old cross. Like keep your disagreement to yourself. Unless you got an actual arguement
From wikipedia: "There is evidence that soldering was employed as early as 5000 years ago in Mesopotamia. Soldering and brazing are thought to have originated very early in the history of metal-working, probably before 4000 BC. Sumerian swords from ~3000 BC were assembled using hard soldering. Soldering was historically used to make jewelry items, cooking ware and tools, as well as other uses such as in assembling stained glass."
It is someone private property and you do not get to decide whether is is taken and put in a museum. Please go away to live away from the West. We in the West want liberty.
You obviously missed the joke, but just to answer you seriously, Vetus Faba: someone saying that and meaning it isn't suggesting that the law should put it in a museum. It's ones own opinion. A moral stance. That's not against liberty and fuck you for suggesting it is. I'm tired of the "we want liberty" and "freedom of speech"-argument being misused.
Rick watchea the interviewers of the sellers,, and then he learns the least amount... very rarely you see him offer over the interviewers least price..
This dude actually went down the block and got $7800 for that One of the times I think Rick should've called an expert Also soldering was around before that time
If it has no historical value, I would've taken it apart and fashion a new new. The diamonds alone if processed and polished could probably fetch 200 each?
glass ston'es smoked something not diamond, i'm thinking red shaded bleed, far as covered bronze shine, yellow it's worth about 25 dollars. looks like paint dish made jewlerys.
"Dude, this "300 year old cross" is made out of plastic, has "made in China" stamped on it, and is still in the plastic egg from the 10-cent toy dispenser, and you didn't even deposit a dime to get it out of the machine yet.... I won't give you one nickel more than..... there's just too much risk in it for me. If I buy it, first I have to find a buyer interested in this plastic cross, then I gotta go put my own dime in the machine to get it out. What's your bottom dollar?"
The Baroque is often thought of as a period of artistic style which used exaggerated motion and clear, easily interpreted detail to produce drama, tension, exuberance, and grandeur in sculpture, painting, architecture, literature, dance, theater, and music. The style began around 1600 in Rome and Italy, and spread to most of Europe. The popularity and success of the Baroque style was encouraged by the Catholic Church, which had decided at the time of the Council of Trent, in response to the Protestant Reformation, that the arts should communicate religious themes with direct and emotional involvement. The aristocracy viewed the dramatic style of Baroque art and architecture as a means of impressing visitors by projecting triumph, power, and control. Baroque palaces are built around an entrance of courts, grand staircases, and reception rooms of sequentially increasing opulence. However, "baroque" has a resonance and application that extend beyond a simple reduction to either a style or period.
Stella Maris congratulations you know how to copy and paste to look smart in a comment section on the internet because you're insecure about your intelligence
I love how the customer is already getting bored from the history lesson and just wants his money.
Yes... it's funny when they stand there and force the seller to listen to the regurgitation that they are spoon fed by the real experts that the producers hire 🤣
He wasn't bored, dumbass. He was nervous cuz He made that cross himself.
He commented on one of rick's interview video that they chatted for 2 hours after the deal..
🤓 Also though, the ending makes it come full circle. So, not really.
Because hes stupid
Sorry man, looks like you are staying baroque.
LMAO
Nice.
ZING
Hahahahah
Even Rick would make you a fair offer for this comment
“I disagree” cus a blowtorch 300 years ago sounds legit to this guy
Right? Seriously this guy is in denial 😆
It could be old and just have a recent repair
@@Chungustav still degrades the value either way
@@Chungustavthis was my piece and your 100% correct. I had left the cross at a buddies new coin shop he had just opened to display while I was out of town and he had it buffed and soldered-against my wishes…😡
Rick should have a sign on the counter that says: "If you Baroque It, You Bought It."
Or.... "Come in Baroque and leave Baroque.
Surprised ricks hand didn’t burn after touching that cross
Weeb Ygg that would’ve been funny if he acted like it did
LOL
It’s got too much nicotine residue on it so that kept him protected from the flames
How he knew it was fake.
or yours, for looking at the screen.....
Customer: This is the original cross jesus was crucified on.
Rick: Best I can do is 8 bucks and I'm the one risking here.
I have the cross jesus was nail to
Rick: best i can do is $50 i mean I have to pay to restore it and its a low market.
I have to Jesus himself I want $1M
Rick: there is not much jesus collectors out there thats a low market I am taking a risk i will give $200 maximum
@@OmicronWeaponry repent for the remission of sins and get the Holy Spirit and receive Jesus and this is all free. Sad when people don't have at the end of their lives.
@@jeffouellette9946 It's free? Lol, to bad gid can give you anything besides money. How is it, that all mighty god always need money? I bet if you somehow forbidden people to give money to church and cut out salary from priests, your god will be gone in like a 100 years..
@@milosjazic7453 not really but thats what the world has come to with out money the world wouldnt be the same :(
He didn't call in a buddy this tim
WasteYour Time as a pawn shop owner you should probably know a lot about jewelry
There was supposed to be a specialist from the UK flying in for the taping of this episode but she ended up not being able to make it. Had she have been there it would have been a much different outcome I feel..
dude bought it at a flee market in queens for $3
Robbo where's this market at that sells $200+ worth of gold for $3?lol
@@Phike9391 hahaha
I am the guy who brought this to pawnstars.. I actually bought it for $24 in Lincoln, Nebraska. And after leaving the taping, I walked down the street and sold it for $7800...
Jay Bardo sure. Any proofs that you are the guy?
Coffee Link look at him it’s him
If I had a dollar for every time he said "it would be worth a lot of money" I'd be rich.
baroque fidget spinner
toploz_ jr lmao
Awesome, great comment
Normie
nice clickbait, obama wasn't even in this video
Bahaha too funny
haa
ua-cam.com/video/cvZPm3lqaPs/v-deo.html XP
lol
Rory Coles wow
I bet he has a bucket full of those crosses that he takes to every pawn shop to try and sell.
What an expensive fidget spinner.
Bruce Wayne 😂😂😂
Bruce Wayne Lol😂
I've seen much more expensive fidget spinners, even 😆
Actually soldering was around a long time before blowtorches
That don't exist
They kind of did have blowtorches back then. They blew through long tubes into an oil lamp to make the flame hot. That’s why they are called “blow” torches, because you literally used to blow the oxygen into them. Switching to modern gas just made things easier. I’ve used an old style blowtorch though, they work great and are still commonly used around the world. Theres no way people could have made such intricate metal work in ancient times without them. Haha
Rick is cheaper than a plastic penny
Announcer: Congratulations! You've won a million dollars from the lottery! Now sign your name on the ticket to claim your prize.
Rick: The best I can do is a sigh...
don't know about other countries in Europe but in UK gold jewellery hallmarks were introduced after queen victoria although silver pieces have been hallmarked for centuries. I have bought a load of Victorian gold and it's never stamped.
ddullaway I know , right? I tried explaining that exact fact to rick but of course they cut all that out of the final cut...
@@whatchoobeezbout He also said they didn't have blowtorches but they actually did which is where the word blowtorch came from, it was you blowing air through a sort of lamp or whatever. Also soldering has been around for 900+ years, the early medieval rings were almost always soldered.
@@KroryykDBI couldn’t believe that their specialist couldn’t make it even after they postponed my bit a week because of this specialist putting it off-just to not show. Supposedly she was coming in from Europe just for my cross. Maybe I should have waited for her to be able to make it.. 😒
Cogsworth (Beauty and the Beast) - "If it's not Baroque, don't fix it!"
I thought it was a fidget spinner from the thumbnail XD
Whatever dude
2:25 - 2:35 This is like the exact opposite of "old but gold"....."new but gold" lol
I get my history lessons watching this show
“I don’t want the diamonds” said no one ever lol
Diamonds dont have resale value in general
Thanks again for your time and fotos videos and pictures super Love...
Blow torchs have been around since ancient times. The first one were lamps with a blow tube attached. Tin solder has been around as long or longer than blow torches.
I'm addictted your program
It wasn't modern made just modern repaired
he didn't even scratch the F out of it and dip it in acid.
Sweet Cthulhu Yep it was baroque and someone fixed it!
lol
Even in baroque times they already soldered the rings onto the back of buttons (at least in germany) but it was very uncommon back then
I think so too
1.2 million views, 3 comments, completely reasonable
That customer sounds JUST like Corey!!!
Ricks wife:Hey Rick we got twins im pregnant
RICK : Best I can do is one ,and im taking the risk here .
Goes to get a second opinion, that person calls Rick as their expert. Lol
I really don’t even want the diamonds is the most funny and cliché I ever heard from Eric😅😂😂
Eric who?
@@gheorghiualex your dad💀😂
🙄?
Smart move on the 2nd opinion.
erm...soldering was a staple of metal working in the 1600s and 1700s!
It goes all the way back to ancient times actually.
Wtf... Where is that guy's hand touching? 1:12
0:24
*_Neck has entered the chat_*
Rick: What do you have here?
Me: I've got a man-made tinfoil mug used by our local community hobo
Is that a shadow under the seller's chin or is he trying to grow a goatee?! 🤔😬🤣
A lot of dust to collect in that safe, eh?
Maybe the safe will give a second opinion on a welded item.
Laxus Maximus I am the one who brought this into pawnstars. It infact was authentic and over 300 years old. Right after taping I walking it down main street to another pawn shop and sold it immediately for $7800. Turns out the owner of the pawns shop used to be an auctioneer at Heritage....probably ended up selling it for a figure I’d rather not hear about....
@@whatchoobeezbout Sure.
Although it was possible that the cross was actually just modern repaired.
Dexter Dexter you are absolutely correct. I had a friend that owned a coin and bullion shop that I let display the cross while I went out of town one week. Upon my return he took it to a jeweler to get two spots repaired on it and all the original patina buffed off. I could have had a coronary when I got back and saw what he had done...
It looks to me like a VERY old cross that was put on a backing to stabilize and preserve it. Second opinion time for sure.
Haha! Keep holding onto that dream of hittin the big time bud!
that chick in the white tube top
That isn't a tube top. It is a crop top.
Why didn't Rick just tell him it wasn't real..
He built his hopes up with that 8,000..
Because it's a tv show
But it is real and it sold for 7800 that same day just down the street from the pawn shop
You dealt with rick one big mistake he didn't know what to do
Dude thought he had the good stuff. Was fun to watch. Great video
It turned out to be authentic cause I sold it right down the street from the pawn shop for $7800…
15k gold? I've never heard of it.
Girl in the back @1:14
ricks nail though at 0:09
A blow torch is not required to melt nonferrous metal.
That's not how you pronounce baroque
baroque
Owner: This crucifix was once owned by Jesus Christ
Rick: Did you have paperwork for that?
Owner: I do have the paperwork but it was signed by God, his Father who passed on to His Son of course
Rick: No, can't do; that's not good enough since it is not signed by Mr. Christ himself...
Owner: Gosh darn it! because I can't go back and ask Christ to sign the paperwork since he die on that cross for our sins billion of years ago!
Rick: Wait! He die on that crucifix?! Now that should worth something! Bring in the DNA Analyst!
Jack Star I
Gun_Damn_IT actually it was on 33 AD
"baroak"
Why do the commenters here always bash Rick....but never bash the customers? This guy claims his $200 item is worth $25,000....but he's willing to part with it for the bargain price of $8000. Rick NEVER makes outrageous claims like that.
he didn't know it was fake a real one was 25 000
It wasn’t fake .
As far as the solder goes he's completely incorrect. You don't need a blowtorch to solder. It's actually a process alot older than most people realize infact it's an ancient technology.
Yeah exactly it just goes to show that Rick doesn't know everything
"...I have here a real cross from JC himself...-OK'...I Noah'a guy who was there...just give me a minute for a phonecall'..."
[...Calls Keith Richards`...] :-D
Second opinion: It's only worth $10, but I'll give you $12...?
He got $7800 for it down the street
Seller: he thinks it's a newer cross, I disagree
Me: ...your not an expert. Your HOPING it's an old cross. Like keep your disagreement to yourself. Unless you got an actual arguement
From wikipedia:
"There is evidence that soldering was employed as early as 5000 years ago in Mesopotamia. Soldering and brazing are thought to have originated very early in the history of metal-working, probably before 4000 BC. Sumerian swords from ~3000 BC were assembled using hard soldering.
Soldering was historically used to make jewelry items, cooking ware and tools, as well as other uses such as in assembling stained glass."
Much early soldering was done using an alcohol lamp with a blowpipe to make the flame "blowtorch". Thats why it's called a blowtorch. DUH, Rick.
I think he meant it was electrically solder'd
If the Churches had stained glass at that time (which they did), then they had soldering irons. They were heated in a fire........
Harry Murray and what does religion got to do with knowledge? Racist detected!
what does race have to do with religion? moron detected!
the legs on the girl with white jean shorts 1:05 , there is something wrong with them
Never ever answer what you asking for it
"I'm going to get a second opinion" (i.e. I couldn't fool Rick so I'm going to try someone else)
100% Genuine alloy solder!
IT BELONGS IN A MUSEUM.
It is someone private property and you do not get to decide whether is is taken and put in a museum. Please go away to live away from the West. We in the West want liberty.
Ever watch or hear about Indiana Jones? Satire is great.
You obviously missed the joke, but just to answer you seriously, Vetus Faba: someone saying that and meaning it isn't suggesting that the law should put it in a museum. It's ones own opinion. A moral stance. That's not against liberty and fuck you for suggesting it is. I'm tired of the "we want liberty" and "freedom of speech"-argument being misused.
SO DO YOU!
Winglesseaglepro
well done well done
Just watched an episode where a lady sold her spider brooch made by Faberge. Anybody know is the video on UA-cam?
Rick watchea the interviewers of the sellers,, and then he learns the least amount... very rarely you see him offer over the interviewers least price..
It looks beautiful. What church does it represent?
I guess that he left the pawn shop as he came in: Broke!
Does rick wears a patek philip chimemaster or im stoned
I felt that walk of shame
This guy could have single handedly made thousands of dollars had he Switched To Geico Car Insurance!!!!
I wonder if the second opinion guy said there were blow torches in the 1700s
0:21 How can it collect dust if it's been in his safe?
1:13 Your hint is shorts
RivalsAirsoft3 with sores or bruises all over her legs. If that's your thing, go for it man.
I mean... that's more or less how they polish diamonds today... just the table spins and the diamond is mounted to a metal arm.
He later sold it for 40k!
Anglo Saxon jewellery was soldered and that was over a thousand years ago...
This guy has T-rex neck like Grimlock....
This dude actually went down the block and got $7800 for that
One of the times I think Rick should've called an expert
Also soldering was around before that time
Where did you read that? I can't find anything on it.
@@shakyboi He's making it up, they all do, that's why they are so annoying.
@@cognitivedissident2881 Look up medieval rings they're almost all soldered, its not a new thing. Rick had no idea what he was talking about here.
@@shakyboi Jay Bardo comments above are by the seller.
It looks like a very old cross that had the back added to stabilize it.
"Big, Bold" AND BRASH
This could sell for A LOT of money
I’ll go $2 and even then I’m taking a risk
Hyped him up then shut him down
I wouldn't trust Rick as far as I could throw him. I didn't see gold solder. I saw leaf.
They still soddered before torches by using a heated rod.
Yep a thin rod of gold heated up then dipped onto the jewelry. It goes back over 900 years.
I would buy the cross!
For how much?
Rick: CHEAP CHEAP MONEY MONEY MONEY
mr beast: TAKE THIS CAR AND 500$
Edit: I’m not hating on rick btw i like their show
If it has no historical value, I would've taken it apart and fashion a new new. The diamonds alone if processed and polished could probably fetch 200 each?
They are brown so they have little value.
glass ston'es smoked something not diamond, i'm thinking red shaded bleed, far as covered bronze shine, yellow it's worth about 25 dollars. looks like paint dish made jewlerys.
It went from baroque to broke style
When you the pope but you have too much swagger
I'm baroque style, too. I never have any money.
The guy left.....brrroooke!
Wow you are rich now😊
Rick, It does not have to have a European Hallmark, many old pieces were NOT marked.
Costume Jewellery lol👍😀
I actually disagree as well. It’s def 200 years old at least.
If it’s not Baroque don’t fix it
"Dude, this "300 year old cross" is made out of plastic, has "made in China" stamped on it, and is still in the plastic egg from the 10-cent toy dispenser, and you didn't even deposit a dime to get it out of the machine yet.... I won't give you one nickel more than..... there's just too much risk in it for me. If I buy it, first I have to find a buyer interested in this plastic cross, then I gotta go put my own dime in the machine to get it out. What's your bottom dollar?"
Was I the only one looking at the hot girl in white shorts in some of the background scene?
I'm sure mr brown wore that famously
am I the only 1 who notice all the missing diamonds are with that girl in the background?
The Baroque is often thought of as a period of artistic style which used exaggerated motion and clear, easily interpreted detail to produce drama, tension, exuberance, and grandeur in sculpture, painting, architecture, literature, dance, theater, and music.
The style began around 1600 in Rome and Italy, and spread to most of Europe.
The popularity and success of the Baroque style was encouraged by the Catholic Church, which had decided at the time of the Council of Trent, in response to the Protestant Reformation, that the arts should communicate religious themes with direct and emotional involvement.
The aristocracy viewed the dramatic style of Baroque art and architecture as a means of impressing visitors by projecting triumph, power, and control.
Baroque palaces are built around an entrance of courts, grand staircases, and reception rooms of sequentially increasing opulence.
However, "baroque" has a resonance and application that extend beyond a simple reduction to either a style or period.
Stella Maris congratulations you know how to copy and paste to look smart in a comment section on the internet because you're insecure about your intelligence
It's just worth it's weight in gold I will give 110$ for it but it's worth 3000
Stay Baroque