Pottery & Porcelain — Estate Sales
Roseville, Rookwood, Weller, Hull, McCoy, Newcomb College and other American art pottery.
Item-type landing pages in Pottery & Porcelain
Editorial deep-dive pages for each specific item type within this category.
Currently scheduled sales
Estate of a Local Collector — Louisville, DeWitt
Estate of a Local Collector — Minneapolis, Quinlan
Billings Estate Sale — Lockhart Family Collection
New York Estate Sale — Holloway Family Collection
Estate of a Local Collector — Seattle, Ormsby
Downsizing Estate Sale — Talbot Neighborhood
Pre-Move Estate Sale in San Diego — Ashby
Downsizing Estate Sale — Carrington Neighborhood
Downsizing Estate Sale — Marchetti Neighborhood
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Coeur d'Alene — Pemberton
Downsizing Estate Sale — Lockwood Neighborhood
Downsizing Estate Sale — Underwood Neighborhood
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Baton Rouge — Yardley
Downsizing Estate Sale — Kingsley Neighborhood
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Bangor — Vance
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Annapolis — Strickland
Downsizing Estate Sale — Yates Neighborhood
Downsizing Estate Sale — Quincy Neighborhood
Downsizing Estate Sale — Pemberton Neighborhood
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Bozeman — Whitfield
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Concord — Underwood
Downsizing Estate Sale — Eastman Neighborhood
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Tulsa — Quinlan
Buying Pottery & Porcelain at estate sales
Estate sales are arguably the best place in the United States to acquire genuine examples of Pottery & Porcelain at fair market prices. Unlike auction houses, where buyer’s premiums of 20-28% can stack on top of the hammer price, estate sales price each item once and the sticker is what you pay (less any progressive day-of discount the liquidator publishes in advance).
For Pottery & Porcelain specifically, experienced buyers tend to arrive at the first sale of the day with a clear inventory in mind. Bring a small flashlight for inspecting hallmarks, condition issues, and signatures; a small magnifier for jewelry or silver marks; and cash and check both, since some smaller liquidators do not yet accept cards. Most professional liquidators provide receipts and will hold larger items until end-of-day pickup. Independent reference guides and recent auction-record databases remain the gold standard for verifying anything worth more than a few hundred dollars.
The discount cascade most professional firms publish — full price day one, twenty-five percent off day two, half-price (or open-offer) on day three — applies to almost everything in the house, including Pottery & Porcelain. Locked-case high-end material and items the family has flagged as ‘firm’ are the two common exceptions. If you’re patient and don’t need the headline pieces, day three is consistently the best value.
If you’re building a serious collection in Pottery & Porcelain, sign up for our category-specific email alerts — we’ll notify you the moment a sale featuring Pottery & Porcelain is added anywhere in the United States. Several independent collector communities and trade publications also publish weekly newsletters worth subscribing to alongside our alerts.