Concept in Definition ABC
Miscellanea / / July 04, 2021
By Florencia Ucha, in Mar. 2013
The word antiquarian is a term that has a recurring use in the field of purchase and sale of antique pieces and also with regard to the collection of antiques .
Person who is dedicated to the collection, study or the purchase and sale of antiques
Meanwhile, the word is usually used to refer to various issues within the field.
To the individual who is dedicated to the study of ancient elements and pieces and who then as such is also dedicated to to write about them, that is, it would be like a kind of historian of these pieces, basically, describing their characteristics, origins, uses, among other issues.
It should be noted that the figure of the antiquarian is really old, approximately in the Middle Ages it would arise and then already between the 16th and 17th centuries the activity began to unfold with greater intensity and extension.
On the other hand, the word is also used in our language to designate that individual who is dedicated to the collection, restoration, in case the piece or furniture so demands and then the sale of the antique furniture and items.
This person, generally, is passionate about all those past things and then takes care of collecting and selecting them and then selling them in a store that is his property.
The antiquarian is demand specific knowledge about the time and origin of the pieces that he sells given that potential buyers are always interested in knowing this information when they purchase a antiquity.
Establishment that retails antique objects and furniture
And the other use that we attribute to the word is to refer to that establishment dealer engaged in the retail of antiques.
Normally, antique dealers feed on pieces that they buy at auctions, in private homes that they decide get rid of old furniture, at fairs, markets and in recent years, thanks to the benefits of technology, Internet It has become one of the most common spaces in which it is possible to buy and sell antiques.
The field of buying and selling antiques is really wide and vast and can range from highly appreciated and valued items such as: collector's books, signed paintings, furniture, clothing, jewelry, among others, even other objects that do not have a high monetary value but are still required for their aesthetics and connection with a time pass.
There is usually no fixed price and the buyer haggle the seller
A characteristic question of the commercialization one of these objects is the price, which is not fixed and therefore admits a negotiation between the antique dealer and the buyer.
Just a paragraph In addition, the question of price in the framework of buying and selling antiques deserves, where the prices that are assigned to the objects are not usually fixed and a negotiation between buyer and seller is admitted that usually admits what is popularly called as bargaining.
Haggling is a procedure by which the buyer asks the seller to make a reduction in the price of the object or piece of furniture.
Many times this request is related to the situation that the property has to be repaired or restoration, a fact that is usually very common in antique furniture that has not been subjected to a process of reconditioning.
For example, an old oak showcase that lacks glass, for that detail, it is common for the interested in buying it, offer something less to your seller and ask him to lower the initial value he asks for for her.
Although there is no established percentage for haggling, what is usually done, for example in relation to the case we raised, is to offer the seller to pay a lower value because you have to place the glasses, then, you find out roughly what that cost would be and lower it from the value that the seller of the showcase.
It may be that he accepts and sells the piece or says no, to which the buyer must decide if he wants to buy it in the value and the state in which it is.
Many times, since they are unique pieces that are not easily found, if the haggling does not go well, the buyer decides to buy the piece anyway.
The practice of haggling is usually more common at antiques fairs and less so in more formal antique outlets.
Always in these stores the final price depends on the age of the object, its state of conservation, of the initial costs and of the demand that it may have in the market.
Antiquarian Topics