Woman finds £4,000 Ming dynasty vase in charity shop - and buys it for £8.50

15 July 2023 , 22:11
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Mary Lawler, 23, spotted the double green celadon antique (Image: LockdalesAuctioneers/BNPS)
Mary Lawler, 23, spotted the double green celadon antique (Image: LockdalesAuctioneers/BNPS)

A cafe worker who bought a vase for £8.50 at a charity shop to decorate her mum's toilet has sold it for a whopping £4,195.

Mary Lawler, 23, spotted the double green celadon antique while going around charity shops in Leigh-on-Sea, Essex. She picked it up as she liked the look of it, unaware it was a valuable Ming-dynasty era Chinese relic - dating between 1368-1644.

The 10ins tall vase had a stint in the downstairs toilet before being used as a doorstop in the porch. She only learnt of its value after seeing a similar vase on BBC Antiques Roadshow which was valued at £10,000.

Mary took it in to Lockdales Auctioneers, of Ipswich, Suffolk, who confirmed its importance and they have now sold it on her behalf. The vase achieved a hammer price of £3,400, with auctioneers fees taking the final figure paid by a UK private collector to £4,195.

Mary will spend the proceeds from the sale on repairing her Volkswagen Golf.

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Her mother Amy Lawler, 49, had tasked her with finding an ornament for her toilet. Mary sent her a photo of the vase to get her mother's approval before parting with the cash as they had only planned 'to spend a fiver'.

Woman finds £4,000 Ming dynasty vase in charity shop - and buys it for £8.50Amy Lawler, 49 and her daughter Mary Lawler, 23 (LockdalesAuctioneers/BNPS)
Woman finds £4,000 Ming dynasty vase in charity shop - and buys it for £8.50The 10ins tall vase had a stint in the downstairs toilet before being used as a doorstop in the porch (LockdalesAuctioneers/BNPS)

Amy, a supply teacher who has moved to Norfolk, said: "We were decorating the downstairs toilet about three years ago in a 1970s style and my daughter went around some charity shops to find something to put in it.

"She sent me a picture of the vase and I said yes so she paid £8.50 for it and brought it home. "We had only planned to send a fiver! "We put it in our downstairs toilet and after a while moved it to the porch to be used as a doorstop.

"When we saw the vase that appeared on the Antiques Roadshow we thought 'that is exactly like ours'. "We took it into the auctioneers and it is both shocking and exciting to learn how much it is worth.

"We are really pleased with the result and Mary can do up her car now!" Chris Elmy, Lockdales specialist, said: "It was a privilege to work with this rare piece of ceramic art.

Woman finds £4,000 Ming dynasty vase in charity shop - and buys it for £8.50The episode of BBC Antiques Roadshow in which expert Lars Tharp valued an identical vase (BBC/AntiquesRoadshow)

"The design of the vase is very intricate being a 'vase within a vase' with lattice-work sides, and would have been the work of an expert potter.

"It is not something you see every day in the average charity shop."

The Antiques Roadshow episode aired last September, with expert Lars Tharp valuing that item at between £5,000 and £10,000.

And according to a book, William and Kate picked a "controlled moment of their choice" to talk to George about his future - and it came around the time of a landmark in his young life so far.

Woman finds £4,000 Ming dynasty vase in charity shop - and buys it for £8.50Mary Lawler, 23, spotted the double green celadon antique (LockdalesAuctioneers/BNPS)

In his biography Battle of Brothers, royal expert and historian Robert Lacey claims George was told about his destiny around the time he turned seven in the summer of 2020. He wrote: "William has not revealed to the world how and when he broke the big news to his son.

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"Maybe one day George will tell us the story himself. But sometime around the boy’s seventh birthday in the summer of 2020, it is thought that his parents went into more detail about what the little prince’s life of future royal 'service and duty' would particularly involve."

James Podesta

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