Log in or Sign up
Antiques Board
Home
Forums
>
Antique Forums
>
Antique Discussion
>
Ideas on opening this container. Mystery treasure inside?
>
Reply to Thread
Message:
<p>[QUOTE="J Dagger, post: 10049584, member: 10944"]I purchased this Chinese barrel type vessel recently. It was sold with the description stating there were unknown contents. The consignor and auction house were unable to open it. It came from a high end auction house that handles really good estates. I don’t think they ever would have sold this piece if it wasn’t for the mystery contents. I was the sucker that took the bait and bought it. There is something reasonably heavy and solid in it and possibly some smaller things. I assume the auction house tried relatively persistently to open it, although I see no damage or signs of forced entry. Even a butter knife is too thick to fit in the space between what I believe is the top and the rest of the barrel. I got it to twist like half a centimeter maybe but no more movement. It’s hard to grip without damaging the brass trim. I tired sticking it in the refrigerator for a couple days. I was hoping maybe the wood had swollen over the humid summer and fall and sealed itself. My thought was that the wood contracting might undo this. I guess I could try the opposite too. The barrel itself can’t be worth much so it might be worth destroying it to get it open. I’d obviously like to avoid this if possible though. Any thoughts on a method that might work? It’s around 6” tall.</p><p><br /></p><p>[ATTACH=full]504552[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]504553[/ATTACH][/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="J Dagger, post: 10049584, member: 10944"]I purchased this Chinese barrel type vessel recently. It was sold with the description stating there were unknown contents. The consignor and auction house were unable to open it. It came from a high end auction house that handles really good estates. I don’t think they ever would have sold this piece if it wasn’t for the mystery contents. I was the sucker that took the bait and bought it. There is something reasonably heavy and solid in it and possibly some smaller things. I assume the auction house tried relatively persistently to open it, although I see no damage or signs of forced entry. Even a butter knife is too thick to fit in the space between what I believe is the top and the rest of the barrel. I got it to twist like half a centimeter maybe but no more movement. It’s hard to grip without damaging the brass trim. I tired sticking it in the refrigerator for a couple days. I was hoping maybe the wood had swollen over the humid summer and fall and sealed itself. My thought was that the wood contracting might undo this. I guess I could try the opposite too. The barrel itself can’t be worth much so it might be worth destroying it to get it open. I’d obviously like to avoid this if possible though. Any thoughts on a method that might work? It’s around 6” tall. [ATTACH=full]504552[/ATTACH] [ATTACH=full]504553[/ATTACH][/QUOTE]
Your name or email address:
Do you already have an account?
No, create an account now.
Yes, my password is:
Forgot your password?
Stay logged in
Antiques Board
Home
Forums
>
Antique Forums
>
Antique Discussion
>
Ideas on opening this container. Mystery treasure inside?
>
Home
Home
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Activity
Recent Posts
Forums
Forums
Quick Links
Search Forums
Recent Posts
Gallery
Gallery
Quick Links
Search Media
New Media
Members
Members
Quick Links
Notable Members
Registered Members
Current Visitors
Recent Activity
New Profile Posts
Menu
Search
Search titles only
Posted by Member:
Separate names with a comma.
Newer Than:
Search this thread only
Search this forum only
Display results as threads
Useful Searches
Recent Posts
More...