ChiefsPlanet

ChiefsPlanet (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/index.php)
-   Nzoner's Game Room (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/forumdisplay.php?f=1)
-   -   Home and Auto Found any Faberge eggs recently? This guy did. (https://www.chiefsplanet.com/BB/showthread.php?t=282497)

Rain Man 03-22-2014 11:44 PM

Found any Faberge eggs recently? This guy did.
 
I love these treasure stories, and this one is amazing.



http://www.nydailynews.com/news/worl...icle-1.1730527

Scrap metal dealer’s junk market purchase turns out to be $33 million Faberge egg

http://static1.nydailynews.com/polop...g23n-1-web.jpg

One man’s trash turned out to be Russia’s priceless treasure.

A scrap metal dealer from the Midwest had no idea that the tiny golden egg he was planning to melt down was actually a $33 million relic from the court of imperial Russia.

The unidentified man unknowingly hit the jackpot when he purchased the 3.2-inch egg at a junk market for a mere $14,000.

He jumped on the deal because he thought the egg was pretty little trinket. The egg stands on an elaborate gold pedestal, supported by lion paw feet. Three sapphires are embedded in the gold and when the man pushed the center diamond, the egg popped open to reveal a Vacheron Constantin watch.

The egg’s creator, royal jeweler Peter Carl Faberge, was known for designing these types of surprises. The former tsars and tsarinas of Russia had no need for more gold — what they wanted was craftsmanship. Tsar Alexander III asked Faberge to make one egg a year until his son, the next Tsar Nicholas II, ordered him to make two a year — one for his wife and one for his mother.

The eggs were created in the greatest secrecy, CNN reports. The royals' only demand was that the eggs contain a surprise.

"Their daily lives were lived at such a height of luxury that you couldn't really excite them with anything of intrinsic value. It was always about the craftsmanship. This is what that object is about, this craftsmanship and demonstration of skill. If you're not looking for it, you won't see it," Kieran McCarthy, director of London’s Wartski antique dealer.

The egg in question was Tsar Alexander III’s Easter gift to his wife, Maria Feodorovna in 1887. It left the hands of the royal family during the Bolshevik Revolution in 1917, when his son Nicholas II was forced to abdicate. He and his family were later executed.

As Russia's rich rushed to the exits, treasures were sold off under Vladimir Lenin and his successor Josef Stalin as part of a policy known as "Treasures into Tractors".

By the time the egg reached the U.S. Midwest, it had lost its royal luster. Its buyer was betting that the egg would help him make a fast buck. But to his vast disappointment, the material value of the egg, jewels, and watch was just $500.

In desperation, the man turned to Google late one night and typed “egg” and the name engraved on the watch, “Vacheron Constantin.” He clicked on a Daily Telegraph article about a missing Faberge egg.

And there it was.

Faberge experts had spotted his egg in an auction house catalogue in 2011, setting off a desperate search. The catalogue was from a March 1964 sale in New York, when an egg with the same description was sold for $2,450.

Kieran McCarthy was quoted in the old article, talking about how much the royal relic could be worth. After hearing that, the man “couldn’t sleep; he couldn’t eat; he couldn’t think about anything else,” McCarthy said.

The man immediately boarded a plane to London.

McCarthy was sitting down for lunch when the man walked in.

"His mouth was dry with fear — he just couldn't talk. A man in jeans, trainers and a plaid shirt handed me pictures of the lost Imperial egg. I knew it was genuine," McCarthy said. "He was completely beside himself - he just couldn't believe the treasure that he had.”

The jeweler traveled to the man’s small Midwestern town and verified the phenomenal find.

The man "just can't believe his luck," McCarthy said. "It's almost an affirmation of his existence that this happened to him."

Faberge eggs are so rare that only royalty and billionaires can ever hope to handle them. 42 of the eggs have been purchased by private collectors and museums. Current owners include Queen Elizabeth and the Kremlin. Metals tycoon Viktor Vekselberg bought a collection of Imperial Faberge Easter Eggs for $90 million from the Forbes family in 2004. Eight, including the recently discovered egg, were thought to be lost.

McCarthy confirmed that an unidentified private collector had purchased the recovered egg. He could not reveal the identity of the man who found the artifact, its sale price or the collector, though he did say that the collector was not Russian.

The jeweler’s story remains unverified because the identities of everyone involved are still shrouded in mystery.

When questioned whether the story was perhaps too fantastic to be true, McCarthy said:

"We are antique dealers so we doubt everything but this story is so wonderful you couldn't really make it up — it is beyond fiction and in the legends of antique dealing, there is nothing quite like this."

The scale of the egg, shown next to a cupcake.


http://assets.nydailynews.com/polopo...g23n-3-web.jpg

Simply Red 03-22-2014 11:48 PM

that cupcake looks amazing.

J Diddy 03-23-2014 12:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Simply Red (Post 10509590)
that cupcake looks amazing.

Not near as good as some LJS

DaFace 03-23-2014 12:05 AM

That's really fascinating. Good for that guy.

cosmo20002 03-23-2014 03:59 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rain Man (Post 10509589)
A scrap metal dealer from the Midwest had no idea that the tiny golden egg he was planning to melt down was actually a $33 million relic from the court of imperial Russia.

The unidentified man unknowingly hit the jackpot when he purchased the 3.2-inch egg at a junk market for a mere $14,000.

There's at least some BS in this story. A "scrap metal dealer" doesn't pay $14K for a little trinket at a "junk market."

Jimmya 03-23-2014 04:53 AM

That cupcake looks delicious.

BlackHelicopters 03-23-2014 05:54 AM

Something strange afoot.

Why Not? 03-23-2014 08:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cosmo20002 (Post 10509627)
There's at least some BS in this story. A "scrap metal dealer" doesn't pay $14K for a little trinket at a "junk market."

Plus one would think even purveyors of a junk market would know what a Faberge Egg was.

BossChief 03-23-2014 10:07 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cosmo20002 (Post 10509627)
There's at least some BS in this story. A "scrap metal dealer" doesn't pay $14K for a little trinket at a "junk market."

That's probably the scrap metal value for it.

BigRedChief 03-23-2014 10:12 AM

I went to a damn good London grill restaurant yesterday and had a good Scottish egg. Does that count?

Why Not? 03-23-2014 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BigRedChief (Post 10509877)
I went to a damn good London grill restaurant yesterday and had a good Scottish egg. Does that count?

I'll give you 14 cents for it

OrtonsPiercedTaint 03-23-2014 10:58 AM

Second string Bronco secondary players poop those out everyday/Knomo

Dave Lane 03-25-2014 09:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cosmo20002 (Post 10509627)
There's at least some BS in this story. A "scrap metal dealer" doesn't pay $14K for a little trinket at a "junk market."

Seconded

Dave Lane 03-25-2014 09:05 PM

Actually I found a Faberge picture frame with a painting of Czar Nicolas V in it. Much cheaper than $14k and unfortunately much less rare.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 05:09 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.