AI Appraisal Estimate

AI-generated estimates · not official valuations

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Submitted item photo
Submitted photo · May 24, 2026

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AI analysis below

AI appraisal

AI analysis & estimate

AI-Generated · Verify before acting

Everything below is generated by AI for informational purposes only. AI can make mistakes — the AI may misidentify items or misattribute them (artist, maker, brand, designer, origin, era). This is not an official valuation and should not be used for insurance, sale, tax, estate, legal, or lending purposes — or any decision requiring a certified appraisal. It is not an authoritative claim about any person, brand, or rights holder — do not share or rely on it as a factual statement about a third party. Always consult qualified professionals before making financial decisions.

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AI Identification

·Not independently authenticated·Verify before acting

Mid-to-late 20th-century style wooden secretary desk with hutch

Furniture

AI Estimated Value

·Not an official valuation·Verify before acting

$250—$450

As of May 24, 2026

AI Item Analysis

·AI can make mistakes·Verify before acting
This furniture piece is a dark-stained wooden secretary desk with an integrated upper hutch. Stylistically, it appears to be consistent with American colonial revival or 'Early American' mass-market furniture popular during the mid-to-late 20th century. The unit features a set of three small drawers situated just below the hutch shelving and three larger drawers on the left-hand pedestal base, finished with brass-toned batwing-style pull handles. The hutch includes an arched top rail with a decorative dentil-mold-style trim and vertical plank backing. The wood displays a warm reddish-brown finish that appears to be a laminate or a heavy lacquer over secondary woods, typical of manufacturers like Ethan Allen or Tell City during that era, though no maker's mark is visible in the image to verify this hypothesis. The accompanying chair is an arrow-back or Windsor-style side chair with turned legs and a central cutout in the top rail. Visible condition appears fair, with minor surface scuffs and dust consistent with age and domestic use. Identification is based on stylistic silhouette and hardware as no labels are clearly legible.

AI Appraisal Report

·AI can make mistakes·Verify before acting
Based on my visual analysis of the provided image, I have evaluated this wooden secretary desk and hutch set. The piece reflects a design vocabulary consistent with the American Colonial Revival or 'Early American' style, which saw high production volumes during the mid-to-late 20th century. While the reddish-brown finish and batwing-style hardware are characteristic of manufacturers such as Ethan Allen or Tell City, I cannot verify the maker without a physical inspection of stamps or labels. The construction appears to be a mix of solid woods and veneers, common for mass-market furniture of that era. I can observe some surface wear and dust, though the structural integrity appears stable from this perspective. The value estimate of $250—$450 assumes the piece is a quality mid-century production in fair to good condition. This market is currently driven by utilitarian demand rather than high-end collectible value, as brown furniture of this period remains plentiful. If this set were discovered to be a modern flat-pack reproduction or have significant veneer damage not visible here, the value would likely drop below $150. Conversely, if a specific prestige maker's mark were found, it might reach the higher end of the range. To confirm this valuation, an in-person examination is required to verify the secondary woods, joinery techniques (such as dovetailing), and the presence of any manufacturer's hallmarks. At this time, the attribution remains a hypothesis based on stylistic silhouette alone.

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