Woman Buys Genuine Picasso in Thrift Store for $6, Sells It for Thousands

When she picked up the $6 plates at her local thrift store, Nancy Cavaliere had a hunch she was onto something special. But she had no idea just how special it would turn out to be.

Cavaliere moved to New York City from Italy when she was just eight years old, and after getting married in 2014, she started to get into thrifting, mostly to furnish her apartment.

Picking up tableware, furnishings and trinkets, the 36-year-old hit the jackpot one day when she stumbled on a set of $6 plates—plates that turned out to be an original piece by one of the most famous artists ever.

"I stumbled on the plates during my daily trip to the store. On my way out I noticed some new china had been added to the shelves. My first reaction was that they would make a great tablescape, but then I turned them over and saw the Picasso tag," Cavaliere told Newsweek.

Picasso plates thrift store
Nancy Cavaliere was stunned to stumble on a set of real Picasso plates at her local thrift store for just $6. casacavaliere/TikTok

"I freaked out," she said. "I didn't know what I was holding, but I knew it could be worth serious money. So I checked out and ran back to my office."

The set of plates set her back just $6, but when she got back to her office and started furiously searching the web, she realized she had stumbled on something special.

"I did the initial googling and figured out the series, the date they were made and pretty much the whole history behind Picasso's ceramic line," said the thrifter.

Spanish painter, sculptor and ceramicist Pablo Picasso is arguably one of the most famous artists of all time. Alongside his famous abstract paintings, he created a whole body of mixed material works.

Picasso designed 633 different ceramic editions between 1947 and 1971—from simple utilitarian objects like plates and bowls to complex pitchers and vases.

Cavaliere, who runs the Instagram account casacavaliere where she shares her latest finds, reached out to a nearby auction house and had the plates authenticated by experts. They estimated that the plates would sell individually for between $3,000-$5,000 each.

"It felt like a crazy amount of money at the time," said Cavaliere. "Then even more so when the auction went live and the price started climbing."

The thrifter watched as the auctions climbed, and her ceramic discovery started selling for $12,000, $13,000, and even $16,000.

"It was absolutely bananas," she said. "I was watching the auction from the office 'screaming crying throwing up.'"

Picasso plates 2
Pictures of the plates when Cavaliere first found them, left, and a picture of the underside markings that confirm their legitimacy. Nancy Cavaliere

Picasso remains one of the highest-grossing artists at auction today, with some realized pieces selling for as much as $179 million.

After the sale, Cavaliere invested the money and continues to thrift regularly.

"My entire home is filled with thrifted, valuable, second-hand finds," she said. "Everything is worth money and has a cool story."

This isn't her only lucrative find, either. A while after the plates, she stumbled on an Alexander McQueen jumpsuit from his second ever collection. Picking it up for $20, it was sold for an amazing $8,500.

While she still likes to browse the local thrift store, Cavaliere said that thrifting isn't what it used to be. "Pre-pandemic I would go thrifting every day since there was a thrift store on the way home from work," she said. "That store closed so now I maybe go once a week."

"Thrifting is not what it used to be pre-pandemic—the whole landscape has changed," she added. "Prices have skyrocketed and demand for secondhand has surged. It's a tough game out there, but you can still find magic."

Another thrift store find left people heartbroken when a man found it on sale for $3.49. While another woman stumbled on a box filled with family memories in a thrift store for just $3.99.

Uncommon Knowledge

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.

About the writer


Alice Gibbs is a Newsweek Senior Internet Trends & Culture Reporter based in the U.K. For the last two years ... Read more

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