Auction: The Linden Family Collection
Oakland, CA · Linden Residence
Estate Liquidation of the Linden residence in Oakland, CA. This is a single-owner estate. Everything in the home is being offered, including pieces purchased…
View sale detailsIn California
5 upcoming kitchenware estate sales in California, sorted by start date.
Oakland, CA · Linden Residence
Estate Liquidation of the Linden residence in Oakland, CA. This is a single-owner estate. Everything in the home is being offered, including pieces purchased…
View sale detailsSanta Barbara, CA · Atwater Residence
Online Estate Auction of the Atwater residence in Santa Barbara, CA. Furniture is uniformly clean, well-kept, and a mix of antique American and European,…
View sale detailsFresno, CA · Vanderhof Residence
Downsizing Sale of the Vanderhof residence in Fresno, CA. Highlights include several signed and dated pieces in the Tools & Workshop category, a generous…
View sale detailsLos Angeles, CA · Brockway Residence
Online Estate Auction of the Brockway residence in Los Angeles, CA. Furniture is uniformly clean, well-kept, and a mix of antique American and European,…
View sale detailsFresno, CA · Sandbourne Residence
Moving Sale of the Sandbourne residence in Fresno, CA. The Sandbourne estate represents nearly five decades of careful collecting in the Mid-Century Modern category,…
View sale detailsNew estate sales, auctions, and previews are indexed daily. Browse the latest listings or jump straight to your state.
Western estates skew strongly mid-century and modern, Spanish Revival and Mission, with notable concentrations of Asian decorative arts, studio pottery, and West Coast mid-century designers. Estates from established hill-country and coastal communities are particularly rich for design-forward buyers. California estates produce some of the deepest mid-century modern inventory in the country, plus Spanish Revival case goods, California pottery (Bauer, Heath, Catalina), and West Coast studio jewelry. Southern California estates run heavy on Asian decorative arts; Bay Area and Sacramento estates regularly surface Eames, Wegner, and Nakashima pieces.
For buyers focused specifically on kitchenware, the California market rewards a few tactical habits. Plan your Saturday route around two or three sales in the same county; California sales typically run from a 9:00 AM opening on day one to a half-price closing on the final day, and the categorical density at any single sale tends to be higher in established neighborhoods than in newer subdivisions. Verify the addresses the day before — most California liquidators publish the exact street address 24 hours in advance for security reasons.
Pre-1960 Griswold and Wagner cast iron with smooth cooking surfaces and clear maker logos commands real money. Pyrex with named patterns (Butterprint, Gooseberry, Pink Daisy) sells faster than any other vintage kitchen category right now.
Pricing on kitchenware at California sales follows the standard estate-sale arc: full price on day one, 25% off on day two, and 50%+ off on the final day. Liquidators in this market are usually open to small negotiations on day one for buyers committing to multiple pieces, and standard practice is a "hold" tag for items you want to commit to but pick up later in the day. For high-value pieces in this category, plan to arrive within the first 90 minutes of opening; the marquee items rarely survive day one regardless of liquidator.
If you cannot make the first day in person, ask the on-site coordinator about phone-bid or remote-buy options. Established California liquidators will sometimes accept a remote purchase for a verified buyer, particularly for kitchenware pieces requested specifically by the buyer.
If you are traveling into California for sales, plan ahead for transportation of larger pieces. California liquidators almost always have a relationship with a local mover or shipper who specializes in estate-sale pickups; ask the on-site coordinator for a referral and budget the moving cost into your purchase decision. For furniture and large pottery, a same-day pickup with a local mover is usually less expensive than scheduling LTL freight.
For kitchenware specifically, packaging and transport are non-trivial considerations — particularly for fragile or oversized pieces. Bring blankets, wrapping, and tie-downs if you plan to take pieces yourself; otherwise, a $75–200 local mover quote is almost always money well spent.
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