Friday, November 22, 2024

I picked up plates for less than £2 in the charity shop – I sold them for £26k

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RUMMAGING  through the shirts and dresses in the local charity shop Nancy Cavaliere, 37, is enjoying spending a quiet thirty-minutes shopping.

Just as second-hand fan Nancy decides to head back to work the mum-of-one takes one final look at the homeware section. 

Nancy Cavaliere has spent hundreds of hours searching through charity shopsCredit: Casa Cavaliere
She bagged these four Picasso plates for less than £8 and sold three of them on for £27,000Credit: Casa Cavaliere

In amongst the usual bric-à-brac she spots four black plates with white lines and a pop of turquoise priced at £1.99 each.

Knowing she can use the plates for a fun dinner party Nancy grabs her bargain find and takes them to the till.

She didn’t know it at the time, but the human resources coordinator was buying crockery that would change her life forever.

“I discovered those four plates were Pablo Piccasso originals,” she tells Fabulous.

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“I paid £6.36 for the set and I sold three at auction for £27,173, I still can’t believe it.

“I bought them because I loved the colours. I never imagined the plates I paid less than a tenner for would be works of art.” 

PENNIES TO THOUSANDS OF POUNDS

Nancy admits she has plenty of charity shop wins in her arsenal.

“I’ve bought vintage Gucci, Oscar De La Renta Alexander McQueen clothing for pennies and turned them into thousands of pounds,” she says.

“I am proof you can find hidden treasure in the thrift store or at the charity shop. It’s not an urban myth, it’s reality.”

Human resources coordinator, Nancy lives in New York City with her husband Alex, 37, businessman  and three-year-old daughter, Chiara.

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Nancy was born in Campania, Italy. When she was seven years old  her family immigrated to New York in 1984 where she discovered a knack for bargain hunting.

“We didn’t have much money and would make the most of the second-hand stores,” she says. 

“A lot of people think these shops are dirty, smelly and full of junk people don’t want. 

“I was taught at a young age that charity and second-hand stores were treasure troves.”

Nancy’s home is filled with thrifted findsCredit: Casa Cavaliere
The mum was unable to afford department store finds so she reclaimed second hand buysCredit: Casa Cavaliere

When Nancy married her husband in 2014, she used her skill in finding hidden second-hand gems to furnish their rented apartment.

“I found shopping malls and department stores so stressful. I remember crying in one because everything was so expensive. 

“Instead, I furnished our flat with second-hand items. 

“My family and friends were stunned at what I found. 

“I discovered tiny, framed artwork to beautiful vases, curtains and even floor rugs all second hand but all beautiful.

“I found a £3000 mohair sofa in a second-hand store for £100. 

“I found mid-century candlesticks and retro dining chairs and tables upcycling them for mere pennies to bring glamour to our home.” 

PUTTING IN THE HOURS

Nancy has spent hundreds of hours looking in second hand stores and thrift shops all over New York.

“You have to put in the work to find amazing pieces,” she says.

“You never know what you will stumble across at the bottom of a box or at the back of a shelf.

“It’s often the most unusual looking item that is worth the most amount of money.

“Often when you least expect to make a discovery you make the find of your life. It’s about patience and persistence.”

I rang my family and sobbed down the phone. It didn’t feel real

Nancy Cavaliere

That’s how in August 2018 Nancy discovered her Picasso plates.

“When I spotted the plates, I just loved the colours. They looked different and unusual and they were in perfect condition.

“I turned one plate over and spotted an indentation in the ceramic which read Picasso.

“I didn’t think anything of it,  I was standing in a thrift store in New York. I never imagined I’d find ‘a Picasso’ next to some glasses from Ikea and used Walmart cutlery.”

GUT INSTINCT

It was only when Nancy was walking back to work did she wonder if her thrift shop find might actually be linked to the famous painter.

“I got a weird feeling in my stomach. I had a friend who worked in antiques, so I texted her about the plates,” she explains.

“She told me they probably were fake. 

“Luckily, she did however suggest I should contact an auction house in New York that specialises in Picasso’s work – ‘just in case’ they were real.”

Nancy called Sotheby Auction House in New York and spoke with the department that specialised in Picasso’s work.

She recalls: “I sent them pictures and videos of the plates. Then they asked me to bring one in so they could examine it.

“When they told me my crockery set that cost less than £8 were in fact four real and original Picasso ceramic plates I was stunned. 

“I couldn’t believe it. To this day I still feel waves of emotion about the thrift shop find.”

Pablo Picaso is considered one of the most influential artists of the 20th century and is a co-founder of the cubits’s movement.

According to experts Picasso created 633 different ceramic editions between 1947 and 1971 which would include 50 to 300 pieces each.

During his lifetime Picasso produced a total of 3500 unique pieces of ceramic pottery including Nancy’s thrift store plates as well as his famous artworks.

Nancy’s plates were four of one hundred pieces created by Pablo Picasso called Service Visage Noir. 

“I remember thinking when I paid £1.99 for each plate in 2018, they couldn’t be real Picasso’s when I thought he’d never done ceramics. I am glad I was wrong,” she says. 

LIFE-CHANGING SUM

Nancy decided to sell three of the plates at auction.

“I dropped the plates off to the auction house for safekeeping,” she says. 

“They valued them at around £4,000 each for the auction catalogue. 

“I then had to wait four months for the Picasso auction as they are held only two a year.”

In December 2022 Nancy watched the three plates sell at auction on a live feed on her computer at work.

“I was sweating, and my phone was buzzing with messages from friends and family. I had no idea what was going to happen,” she recalls.

The plates were sold individually, and the first one sold for £6,388.

“I burst into tears. It was overwhelming and exhilarating,” she admits.

Nancy admits when the second plate sold for £10,000, she could hardly speak.

“When the last plate went for £12,777, I almost collapsed.

“I rang my family and sobbed down the phone. It didn’t feel real.”

Nancy invested the money into the stock market to get the best return on her auction windfall.

“It’s a nest egg for my husband and myself. It will also help pay for my daughter’s university fees,” she says.

Nancy has hung onto her fourth plate.

“The fourth plate is extra special. It actually has Picasso’s signature on it. It’s being kept for my daughter,” she says.

Nancy says she has no idea how the Picasso ceramic plates ended up in her local thrifts store.

“I ask myself that question a lot,” she admits.

“The store I found them in gets hundreds of deliveries every week from people donating items, people clearing our flats or people getting rid of junk from their lofts.

NANCY’S NINE TREASURE HUNTING TIPS

  1. Look for unusual and different items
  2. Know when you charity and thrift shops get new stock in
  3. Visit shops regularly
  4. Look at items which are hidden away
  5. Use google to check an items value in store
  6. Buy what you like – not what you think will make you big bucks
  7. Be patient
  8. Remember often it’s a small or  most simple looking item which is worth the most amount of money
  9. If you think you have an item of value check with experts or auction houses

“My guess is whoever dropped them off didn’t realise what they were. I like to think that the plates’ very first owner bought them from Picasso himself.

“I think many unusual items like these plates often get lost when people pass away. Sometimes family members don’t realise what their significance is.

“It’s why I still spend hours each week searching in second hand shops.”

Nancy is now planning on taking her bargain hunting overseas.

“I am planning to visit Britain soon and I can’t wait to see what’s hidden away in Britain’s famous charity stores,” she says.

She regularly shares her thrift shop finds on social media and went viral when  posted about her Picasso Plate Auction.

Nancy has now launched a design business decorating homes Casa Cavaliere and works spaces in the US with second hand items, upcycled furniture and antiques she has thrifted.

“My advice to anyone is hunt around. Look at the bottom of charity shop boxes. Often it’s simple looking items that are worth the most. 

“Every time I go shopping it’s a treasure hunt. It’s why I love thrift stores and charity shops so much. 

 “You can make and find history just by spending a few quid.”

She has kept one plate for her daughterCredit: Casa Cavaliere
Nancy regularly comes across designer pieces when charity shoppingCredit: Casa Cavaliere
She says she always shops for items she likes rather than things that will make moneyCredit: Casa Cavaliere

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