Photos: Antiques Roadshow's NYC Visit Included A Million-Dollar Appraisal!
31 photos
Lines<br/>
The Keno brothers with a fan<br/>
The million dollar appraisal<br/>
George Wright, who was born in Yonkers, is in the Baseball Hall of Fame<br/>
One of the letters<br/>
Appraiser Leila Dunbar<br/>
Me and my vase<br/>
Appraiser Lark Mason looks at my vase<br/>
Appraiser <a href="http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/roadshow/appraisers/james-supp/">James Supp</a> looking at some old medical equipment<br/>
Supp believed this veterinary syringe, from the early 1900s, was worth $125 <br/>
This man was on Howdy Doody and had some Howdy Doody items<br/>
Jim wasn't totally sure about the appraisal on his Beatles items<br/>
Unfinished lyrics from George Harrison<br/>
This man's relative carved this ship while on a ship!<br/>
Filming<br/>
Producer Marsha Bemko said that New York City had a lot of art created in it—and much of it stayed in New York—so many appraisers were seeing some special things.<br/>
One man brought an old radio.<br/>
Waiting in the paintings line.<br>
Michael shows his friend's collection of old photographs to appraiser Daile Kaplan.<br/>
A photograph of Madison Square Park captures the interest of other Swann appraisers.<br/>
An old photograph of the Sphinx.<br/>
Listening to Dorothy, a Manhattan resident, describe her black dolls.<br/>
This doll's eyes open up when she stands up; Dorothy's grandchildren are scared of it.<br/>
The doll, made in Germany, is from the late 1800s and is worth $1200.<br/>
Leslie Keno takes a look at some furniture.<br/>
Former Assemblyman Richard Brodsky with his items—a WPA oil cartoon of Rip Van Winkle and a 2000 hanging chad machine from the 2000 election.<br/>
These paintings are from the early 1800s. <br/>