Silver Sold by the Gram at Estate Sales
Sterling and coin silver flatware and small hollowware sold by weight at posted spot pricing — the most common silver category at estate sales.
When a longtime collector of Silver Sold by the Gram downsizes or settles an estate, the resulting liquidation is usually the moment that meaningful pieces re-enter the market. At any given moment, our directory carries dozens of upcoming sales nationwide that include Silver Sold by the Gram in the published inventory. Each listing names the estate liquidator running the sale, the exact street address, the published sale dates and hours, and a representative selection of the inventory the firm has photographed and tagged.
The buyers who consistently do well in Silver Sold by the Gram arrive on the first morning of the sale prepared. That means having walked the photographs in advance, having a short mental list of the two or three pieces worth real attention, and being honest with themselves about condition before negotiating any price. Bring a small flashlight for inspecting hallmarks, joinery, and interior surfaces; bring a magnifier for signatures and marks; and bring a tape measure so you don't buy a piece that won't actually fit through your front door. Most professional liquidators issue numbered entry tickets the morning of the first sale day starting roughly thirty minutes before the published opening; the order of those numbers is the only meaningful queue advantage available, and there is no shortcut except being there earlier than the next person. Many of the most useful pricing references and condition guides for Silver Sold by the Gram are published independently and are worth reviewing before any serious purchase.
the household-liquidation pipeline for Silver Sold by the Gram at the estate-sale level is meaningfully different from the brick-and-mortar antique shop or the auction-house gallery. Estate liquidators are professionals working on commission against a complete contents sale, so their incentive is throughput across the weekend, not maximum margin per piece. A piece that would price at $1,200 in a downtown antique shop will frequently price at $400 to $600 at the originating estate sale, and at half of that on the final day of the weekend. The discount cascade — full price on day one, twenty-five percent off on day two, half-price (or open-offer) on the third day — applies to almost everything in the house, with locked-case high-end material and items the family has flagged as ‘firm’ the two common exceptions.
For Silver Sold by the Gram specifically, the authentication considerations to keep in mind on the floor are the standard ones — period of manufacture, condition of original surface, presence and legibility of maker's marks, and consistency of construction details with the claimed attribution. Reproductions and later copies are common in every category at every price point; the protection is to inspect carefully, ask the liquidator any direct question, and walk away from anything you can't verify in the time you have to make the decision. Independent appraisal databases, scholarly reference works, and the published catalogs of the major auction houses remain the gold standard for verifying any piece worth more than a few hundred dollars.
If Silver Sold by the Gram is an active focus of your collecting, the most useful thing you can do on this site is bookmark the category page for the relevant subcategory and sign up for free email alerts at the right of any page in the directory. We’ll notify you the moment a new sale is added that includes Silver Sold by the Gram in the inventory, anywhere in the United States. The lead time on a typical estate sale is between five and fourteen days from the moment the liquidator publishes the listing, so a same-day alert is meaningfully better than checking the directory weekly — particularly for the smaller, higher-value pieces that move within the opening hour of day one.
Currently scheduled sales featuring Silver Sold by the Gram
Showing the next 12 of 291 upcoming sales that include Sterling Silver inventory (the parent category for Silver Sold by the Gram).
Wichita Estate Sale — Blackburn Family Collection
Detroit Estate Sale — Pickering Family Collection
Estate of a Local Collector — Lincoln, Dunbar
Las Vegas Estate Sale — Fairbanks Family Collection
Nashville Estate Sale — Carrington Family Collection
Estate of a Local Collector — Fort Worth, Vandermeer
Estate of a Local Collector — Burlington, Vickery
Cheyenne Estate Sale — Jameson Family Collection
Downsizing Estate Sale — Hargrove Neighborhood
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Montgomery — Driscoll
Pre-Move Estate Sale in Fayetteville — Cromwell
Browse all Sterling Silver sales →
Related item types in Sterling Silver
Browse the parent Sterling Silver category, all 18 item categories, the directory of 40 licensed estate liquidators, or every active estate sale currently scheduled in the United States.