Evidence-Based Valuation
Real sold prices. Real sources. No flattery, no anchoring, no made-up ranges. Every number in your report traces to a URL you can verify — or it doesn't appear.
Three steps from photo to verified valuation.
Drop photos of your item. Crop details — maker's marks, labels, stamps, joinery. Add a description. The more context, the sharper the attribution.
The agent reverse-searches your images, verifies attribution, then sweeps eBay sold, 1stDibs, Chairish, auction records, and more for real transaction data.
Structured valuation with per-channel price ranges, dated sold comps, condition notes, and confidence levels. Every claim links to a source.
"Every number in your report links to a source you can verify. If I can't find sold data, I say so — 'insufficient data' is a valid and honest output."
The report never anchors to your purchase price. If evidence says the item is worth less than you paid, it says so. "Great deal" requires comparable sold data — not enthusiasm.
1stDibs listing prices are not comps. Asking prices set ceilings, not floors. Only completed, verified transactions count as valuation evidence.
You can't search for comps until you know what the item is. Attribution — maker, period, model — is verified first. Uncertain attribution means uncertain value.
Every finding carries a confidence level: Confirmed, Probable, Plausible, Unsubstantiated. Fewer than 3 sold comps triggers a Low Confidence flag. No data point is hidden behind false certainty.
Upload a photo, describe the item, pick your mode.