Overview
- A 19th-century pearl-and-diamond collier estimated at €1,800–2,000 triggered a bidding duel and sold to Lisa Nüdling for €5,500.
- The headline-grabbing pocket watch tied to King Ludwig II, appraised at €30,000–35,000, drew a €40,000 offer that the owner refused, keeping it in the family.
- A signed 1971 Joseph Beuys plastic bag was authenticated on air and bought for €450 after a €200–300 estimate.
- Expert checks exposed a supposed diamond ring as zircon with only about €100 gold value, while dealers passed on a 2-carat ring over unverified stone quality.
- Pricing gaps persisted elsewhere: a coin-inset silver tray valued at €14,000–15,000 sold in a three-dealer deal for €9,000, a Savonette pocket watch fetched €3,700 versus a €5,000–5,500 estimate, and flea-market finds like a Loetz jardiniere (€2,200) and an Ikarus statuette (€750) delivered outsized returns.