To PBS/Antiques Roadshow: I think this level of follow-up and expanded backstory and results is great!! Always left some of these shows with a "I wonder what they decided" or "I wonder what happened"... This def scratches an itch!
@@skerriesrockart-- it was mentioned that it was a medieval castle MANSION ... and considering when they originally built castles they were JUST castles, I think it's safe to assume that this mansion is a bit more recent and modeled AFTER a castle.
I'm a grown man and have shown this video to several ppl to show them how beautiful this necklace is. Not very manly but this thing is seriously a work of art!
Though it’s beautiful, I’m afraid the sold amount of this necklace alone at $100,000 wouldn’t be able to fund one dive alone to the titanic. One dive alone cost over $168,000. And this is just a dive , not including mechanical robots to actually explore. So any necklace worth the cost of a dive would have to be near the value of the Hope Diamond..
This really should be in a museum because it's so unique, antique, and beautiful.... I think that piece will just continue to gain value until it's worth millions.
Turquoise Tech Unfortunately, for the people who aren’t wealthy who own very valuable items, the insurance cost on a piece of with high of a replacement value is astronomical and they simply can’t afford it. Better to sell it and see it be truly appreciated for what it is than risk it being stolen or lost in a house fire.
If you aren't particularly wealthy, leaving one family member an item worth $100,000, while leaving nothing of a comparable value to the next, could be kind of unfair.
This is one of the most beautiful necklaces I've ever seen. The opal is radiant beautiful, the green garment stones are mesmerizing. Plus it's from Tiffany. I, personally, would never, ever sell such a highly valuable piece.
Search out their 500th episode special. It's full of updates on the most valuable items they've appraised. Here it is: ruclips.net/video/8Ur2t72pzyg/видео.html&t=1
A superb quality, rare item with history offered first-time out of family at a well-advertised auction can very well top estimates. Good job advising the client, Jill Burgum.
It is sad. It's upsetting a museum owns it now. Museums have enough fortune and money of their own. This house was sentimental for the family and the museum ruined that.
Its not just the fine materials used, its the obvious high skill used in the crafting. This piece wasn't just run up on an assembly line. It was carefully designed and the right jewels were saught out and cut with excruciating attention to minuscule detail. An entire workshop was involved in making this necklace . God knows how long it took. I think it is well wotth the auction price.
Its the obvious high skill used in the crafting? Really? Yeah. We've heard of Tiffany, too. Anyone watching this already knows it didn't come from a bubblegum machine.
Compared to some contemporary pieces that have been appraised for astounding prices, this necklace is head and shoulders above anything else I have seen on AR. That piece should be in the $500,000 range. It is that extraordinary.
It's hard to say no to that kind of money but the family history with that piece, along with the craft history and how stunning it was would be reason enough to keep it.
This is an absolutely gorgeous piece of jewelry! And, it is definitely one of the ones I like the most of various pieces that have been on the show. If it were mine, I would find it extremely hard to part with. I am happy, however, she was able to sell it for as much as she did!
Absolutely stunning!!! If I had the resources, I would have gladly paid more than $100k for it. I wish she could have kept it as a family heirloom, but I’m sure she has her reasons for selling it. I would love to see this piece in a museum. I can only imagine how stunning it looks in person.
If she had more than one child, who would inherit it? And how many of her other children would be furious her favorite kid got it? She sold it, thus keeping the peace in her family. Maybe this money ended her family financial insecurities. She can split money easier than splitting up an opal necklace.
I’d rather own the historical piece of jewelry than have the money. $25,000 is a lot but the piece is special and her great grandmother owned it. I wish I had something from any of my ancestors.
Same. I would never have sold that, especially since she had the painting of her great-grandmother wearing it. But maybe she didn’t have kids or anyone to pass it onto. Then maybe I would prefer to get the enjoyment of knowing I had money to live the rest of my life on. Or a new car. 😉
Stevenowski Tiffany made the offer with no provenance. They could say it was theirs due to the style and handwork. All the others did was use the picture and where the woman came from to create a link between them all. There still is no proven link between Tiffany and the jewellery.
1manuscriptman I was coming from as somebody who works in a museum. I’m an archivist ‘by trade’. To the museum world ‘Provenance’ is King as it gives context to the item. Without the signatures of the Founding Fathers on the Declaration it becomes a parchment with the words of the Declaration of Independence written on it, circa 1776. For one it maybe worth a couple of thousand, the other it is priceless. It all has to do with Provenance.
1manuscriptman Thanks for the correction. I work as an archivist for sports though the earliest piece I’ve looked at is a 9th Century psalter! So nice.
Each components were extremely rare...I thought everyone low-ball her. I wished that she would have kept the necklace but Im glad that she got more than the initial estimate and offers.
Temper Hollow Opal/October birthdays are so lucky! I’m Garnet/January and personally wish I was born in September/Sapphire or October/Opal (like my fiancé and sister respectively), just cause I prefer blue or illuminescent stones lol!
I’m a block brick and stone mason… They had lots of money to build a house made of large stone. Love to metal detect these houses they always have lots of lost treasures.
I'm not a jewelry guy but even I can see that the necklace is possibly one of the most gorgeous necklaces I've ever seen.
You can keep your diamonds and rubies and emeralds. For me, a black opal is the most beautiful of all precious stones
@@darren_anscombe I imagine the mistress of whoever won the auction, feels the same way...
nah black opal is stupid... though it is a pretty great 19th century historic piece... for women
I’ll take $100k “stupid” any day.
Jewelry items with multimillion dollar prices do not look as beautiful as this
5:50 That sneeze in the background when she said $200,000, was the best timing. 😂😂
I came here to say that!!! 😂😂😂
Haha I didn't hear the first time
Good catch 😂😂
To PBS/Antiques Roadshow: I think this level of follow-up and expanded backstory and results is great!! Always left some of these shows with a "I wonder what they decided" or "I wonder what happened"... This def scratches an itch!
One of the most beautiful pieces I've ever seen and the Grandmother's portrait was stunning, and the castle! Wow.
Yes but it was not a real castle and absolutely not medieval..it was a house built to look like a castle around 1900-1920s
@@skerriesrockart-- it was mentioned that it was a medieval castle MANSION ... and considering when they originally built castles they were JUST castles, I think it's safe to assume that this mansion is a bit more recent and modeled AFTER a castle.
The beautiful opal alone was worth at least $25,000. I’m so glad that they got so much for it!!!!
I'm a grown man and have shown this video to several ppl to show them how beautiful this necklace is. Not very manly but this thing is seriously a work of art!
What a nice lady. Lovely to see someone thoroughly enjoying someone else's good fortune.
she got a cut
@@DrinkWhiskeyRaiseHell Probably 25% of $100k.
It's amazing to have a portrait that looks like a painting of her wearing it
If you think that's amazing I humbly offer you ruclips.net/video/XPp8D9Slj4I/видео.html. A family painting dating back to ~1931.
The portrait is a painting
you don't get let out much do you ....... and you eagerly go along with the DEMANDS for EQUALITY ..... please give BACK your rights to have a VOTE
I wish Kate Winslet had worn this in Titanic instead of the imitation Hope diamond. Perfect art nouveau design!!
@@SicilianStealth is coming
Though it’s beautiful, I’m afraid the sold amount of this necklace alone at $100,000 wouldn’t be able to fund one dive alone to the titanic. One dive alone cost over $168,000. And this is just a dive , not including mechanical robots to actually explore. So any necklace worth the cost of a dive would have to be near the value of the Hope Diamond..
Ñ
Totally would've been better. You are so right.
This really should be in a museum because it's so unique, antique, and beautiful.... I think that piece will just continue to gain value until it's worth millions.
Like in the Smithsonian! They have the most beautiful fine jewelry section I have ever seen!❤️
I can’t imagine selling a family piece, but what an amazing history with the necklace. Wow.
If not you, certainly the next generation. Hard choice for sure but in reality its hard to say no to the potential money.
Turquoise Tech Unfortunately, for the people who aren’t wealthy who own very valuable items, the insurance cost on a piece of with high of a replacement value is astronomical and they simply can’t afford it. Better to sell it and see it be truly appreciated for what it is than risk it being stolen or lost in a house fire.
If you aren't particularly wealthy, leaving one family member an item worth $100,000, while leaving nothing of a comparable value to the next, could be kind of unfair.
@@bizm it wasn't Turquoise Tech who wanted to keep it -- it was Emmalee Buzzare who couldn't imagine selling a family piece.
Unless you are wealthy, jewellery like that is just an historic object. It will live on as a relic of the time in which it was created by Tiffany.
Stunning necklace! Was so happy to see it cleaned up in the auction photos.
Yes, it was stunning then!
This is one of the most beautiful necklaces I've ever seen. The opal is radiant beautiful, the green garment stones are mesmerizing. Plus it's from Tiffany.
I, personally, would never, ever sell such a highly valuable piece.
Yea, right. LOL
Wow I wish ARS did more updates like this.
Search out their 500th episode special. It's full of updates on the most valuable items they've appraised.
Here it is: ruclips.net/video/8Ur2t72pzyg/видео.html&t=1
The beauty of this pendant far surpasses it's auction price.
The beautiful black opal, the workmanship, the history - they were so smart to do the research & let the Auction house handle it. A gorgeous piece!
What a professional Jill Burgum is and giving great advice without trying to make money.
Beautifully proportioned, immediately catches the eye as something special.
Jill Burgum is not only a charming, well informed appraiser but a very lovely woman. Always nice to see smarts paired with beauty!
Yes she sure is.
Agreed! She is my cousin.
This necklace is absolutely beautiful.
A superb quality, rare item with history offered first-time out of family at a well-advertised auction can very well top estimates. Good job advising the client, Jill Burgum.
Stunning piece! That opal is magnificent. 😍💗 I'm so glad Joan didn't just sell it back to Tiffany archives!
lol
That opal stone had me shed a tear.
Ugggghhhh so beautiful
Saaaaame! That black opal was gorgeous ♡
most opals come from the south west of Australia
Seriously
Nice that Tiffany worked with the seller. Great story.
I loved hearing what happened to a piece on the Road Show!
Without a doubt, the most beautiful piece of jewelry I've ever seen
I can’t even imagine how long it took for the craftsman to build that piece. The intricacies of it are mind boggling!
Wow, it really cleaned up nicely! It was pretty before, but cleaning really made it pop.
I watch antiques roadshow a lot this piece is so gorgeous 😍
So wonderful. It's sad, her family doesn't still own, that BEAUTIFUL house.
It is sad. It's upsetting a museum owns it now. Museums have enough fortune and money of their own. This house was sentimental for the family and the museum ruined that.
The most beautiful necklace I have ever seen.
That stone is absolutely spectacular!
What an absolutely gorgeous piece. Brilliant colors and completely beautiful design.
Oh My God! Such a beautiful necklace and the portrait as well!
What an incredible story to that absolutely stunning necklace!!
What a WONDERFUL history behind such a beautifully crafted piece of antique art/jewelry!
5:53 Bless you to whoever sneezed in the background
Sofia sewell... that was too funny!!I had to go back and listen to the sneeze!lmaoo,hadent noticed before..
That's where Covid started
That was an honest hay fever sneeze!
Its not just the fine materials used, its the obvious high skill used in the crafting. This piece wasn't just run up on an assembly line. It was carefully designed and the right jewels were saught out and cut with excruciating attention to minuscule detail. An entire workshop was involved in making this necklace . God knows how long it took. I think it is well wotth the auction price.
Its the obvious high skill used in the crafting? Really?
Yeah. We've heard of Tiffany, too. Anyone watching this already knows it didn't come from a bubblegum machine.
Thank you for sharing this video the history of the castle, Joans grandmother, spectacle
I love these WONDERFUL stories of good news coupled with good fortune!!!
Such a delight to know that someone hit a LIFE Lottery!
That gal was very good and gave great, selfless advice - well done!
Oh, she and her company got a tidy commission off of that sale. Believe it. :-)
Not so selfless. They don't work for free.
KD Nick - ok, maybe not the best choice of word 🤷
A boon to the program and people who attend the event is the example of the excellent qualities and integrity of purpose of their appraisers.
That opal is STUNNING. Mother Nature, the original artist.
They did indeed low-ball her, the green garnet is the rarest of the garnets and is sometimes as much as $30,000 on its own!
This was years and years ago..
It deserves to go for $100,000. What a stunning piece.
Wonderful story!
Thank you for sharing 🥰
Magnificent piece! 💜
STUNNING! Green garnets AND black opal. WOW.
Well done Ms. Burgum. Well done to the show and PBS.
that result is,
comforting.
thank you, louis t.
What a great story and happy ending this is.
Absolutely amazing. Love this show ❤️
What a stunning piece!!
Compared to some contemporary pieces that have been appraised for astounding prices, this necklace is head and shoulders above anything else I have seen on AR. That piece should be in the $500,000 range. It is that extraordinary.
It's hard to say no to that kind of money but the family history with that piece, along with the craft history and how stunning it was would be reason enough to keep it.
If she sold it to Tiffany, I bet all the records about it would've magically been found.
The lady appraising the necklace is so beautiful 😍❤️
This is an absolutely gorgeous piece of jewelry! And, it is definitely one of the ones I like the most of various pieces that have been on the show.
If it were mine, I would find it extremely hard to part with. I am happy, however, she was able to sell it for as much as she did!
What a great story. Just the Opal alone is priceless.
What an incredible piece. $100k even seems low
5:43 She's says today it would probably be worth 150-200 thousand dollars.
Too beautiful. If I had a piece like that I'd never let it go.
Kip's Castle was a mile or two from where i went to high school in Montclair. I vaguely recall hearing about the house back then.
Lovely story. Talk about treasures in the attic!
Wow. Very interesting glimpse of the auction world.
What a wonderful, historic story told by a lovely lady! WoW, $100.000 for an opal....♥️🍀☺️
Goosebumps!! 💘💘💘 ABSOLUTELY EXQUISITE!!!! 💖💎📿💎💖
Absolutely stunning!!! If I had the resources, I would have gladly paid more than $100k for it. I wish she could have kept it as a family heirloom, but I’m sure she has her reasons for selling it. I would love to see this piece in a museum. I can only imagine how stunning it looks in person.
If she had more than one child, who would inherit it? And how many of her other children would be furious her favorite kid got it? She sold it, thus keeping the peace in her family. Maybe this money ended her family financial insecurities. She can split money easier than splitting up an opal necklace.
You can't take a necklace with you when you die plus who doesn't need 100 thousand dollars?
I would never part with that necklace if I inherited it!! 😍
That Opal is amazing
Absolutely exquisite piece of jewellery
That's one of the prettiest pieces of jewelry I have ever seen.
I’d rather own the historical piece of jewelry than have the money. $25,000 is a lot but the piece is special and her great grandmother owned it. I wish I had something from any of my ancestors.
Same. I would never have sold that, especially since she had the painting of her great-grandmother wearing it. But maybe she didn’t have kids or anyone to pass it onto. Then maybe I would prefer to get the enjoyment of knowing I had money to live the rest of my life on. Or a new car. 😉
Seems to me that Tiffany low-balled the offer at $25,000.
🤨
Joan made the right call. Wow.
Stevenowski Tiffany made the offer with no provenance. They could say it was theirs due to the style and handwork. All the others did was use the picture and where the woman came from to create a link between them all. There still is no proven link between Tiffany and the jewellery.
1manuscriptman I was coming from as somebody who works in a museum. I’m an archivist ‘by trade’. To the museum world ‘Provenance’ is King as it gives context to the item. Without the signatures of the Founding Fathers on the Declaration it becomes a parchment with the words of the Declaration of Independence written on it, circa 1776. For one it maybe worth a couple of thousand, the other it is priceless. It all has to do with Provenance.
1manuscriptman Thanks for the correction. I work as an archivist for sports though the earliest piece I’ve looked at is a 9th Century psalter! So nice.
Absolutely!
EXCELLENT video!! Thank you for posting this "Gem" HAHAHA! It's fabulous, keep 'em coming, please!
I didn't even know that some opals are black. It's gorgeous.
They are not only the most expensive but the most beautiful of opals. My next favorite is a fire opal.
Wow!! That necklace is stunning 😍
I don't think I could part with such a sentimental piece like that, I'd want the next generation to enjoy wearing it.
Each components were extremely rare...I thought everyone low-ball her. I wished that she would have kept the necklace but Im glad that she got more than the initial estimate and offers.
The sneeze @5:53 though lol
This piece is stunning 😍😲😊😊
That necklace is stunning.
That necklace is gorgeous and different!
Imagine a jewelry expert saying your Grandma's necklace was the most amazing piece they had ever seen?
What a ravishing necklace! My birthstone too.
Temper Hollow Opal/October birthdays are so lucky! I’m Garnet/January and personally wish I was born in September/Sapphire or October/Opal (like my fiancé and sister respectively), just cause I prefer blue or illuminescent stones lol!
I don't know if I could have sold it :( But good for her she didnt take Tiffany's lowball offer!
I think everyone is most happy about that part. Tiffany doesn't deserve it back with that swindling "offer."
Time for a Rick joke! "Uhhh....I have to store it. I can give you $200 bucks for it. That's the best I can do."
Omg 😱 I would die for that necklace it’s just so much my taste!
I’m a block brick and stone mason… They had lots of money to build a house made of large stone. Love to metal detect these houses they always have lots of lost treasures.
That was fun! Excellent job by all...
Fantastic story. Thanks
5:53 min That sneeze after she said the estimated price XD that just got me
You KNOW when tiffany's offered $25K,
that was SERIOUS LOWBALLING.
That was your CLEAR INDICATION you'd EASILY realise FOUR TIMES MORE at AUCTION.
not really
Maybe not 4 times more, but certainly at least 50% more. In fact, there's a decent chance that Tiffany Archives was the final bidder.
NOT A MUCH AS FOUR TIMES, BUT A GOOD 50.000
@@DavidDavid-jb1cy Funny because if you watch the full video she gets 100k at auction and they talk about how today it would be worth 200k.
Except she did indeed get FOUR TIMES that amount. Did y'all even watch the video??
Awesome for the lady owner, mind-blowing 💙
Idk if I could sell it if I had that family heirloom. Gorgeous piece of jewelry
Wow such a beautiful piece
Kip's Castle is goooooorgeous!!! Now I'm going to research it and see if there is virtual tour available so I can see the inside.
There are real medieval castles you can view on line
So amazingly beautiful!❤️
Kip castle is in my hometown. What an interesting back story
That’s a stunning necklace.
wonderful story