And while most are extremely affordable, there are some expensive vases that really tell history. And the act of throwing ...
Anna Lee Dozier started to wonder about the object's origins when she realized it resembled artifacts in a Mexican museum ...
Anne Lee Dozier of Washington, D.C. displayed a 2,000-year-old Mayan vase in her library for five years before learning its ...
The Washington, D.C., woman found the ceramic vase in a local thrift store near a U.S. Air Force base, and bought it for $3.99 US ($ 5.48 Cdn). "In my work, I travel a lot to Mexico, and this ...
She said the vase looked “old-ish” and she suspected it to be a 20- or 30-year-old tourist reproduction of Mayan-style pottery. Dozier liked the vase anyway and decided to bring it home.
Gina Keating and volunteers at the Old Poway Pottery studio make and sell 1800s-style tavern ware, mid-century mugs and gifts.
A Washington, D.C., woman had no idea that the vase she purchased for $3.99 at a thrift store was a Mayan artifact over 1,000 years old. Five years later, the misplaced ceramic will be returned to ...
A thrift shopper from picked up the vase at a store near her home in Washington, D.C. It wasn't until she went to Mexico that ...