Free Japanese antique appraisal

A free Japanese antique appraisal helps sort porcelain, prints, netsuke, textiles, marks, condition, and provenance questions.

Market example image for A LARGE JAPANESE PORCELAIN VASE BY YASOKICHI III, CIRCA 1986
Market example image from Appraisily's auction database, not a final appraisal. Use the evidence table below for context.

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One clear answer

A free Japanese antique appraisal helps sort porcelain, prints, netsuke, textiles, marks, condition, and provenance questions.

Auction records can show real market behavior, but they cannot resolve authenticity, lawful ownership, cultural sensitivity, export history, or final value by themselves.

Start with photos and provenance. Then decide whether a free screen, professional appraisal, or specialist/legal review is the right next step.

Quick checklist

  • Full object photos: front, back, sides, underside, base, interior, and scale.
  • Close-ups of marks, signatures, labels, seals, stitching, weave, carving, repairs, cracks, chips, stains, losses, or restoration.
  • Measurements, weight where relevant, material notes, old receipts, collection labels, export/import papers, appraisals, family notes, and sale history.
  • Do not clean, polish, repair, relabel, reframe, wash, or separate documents before photographing the item.

Provenance and restriction checks

Do not assume that age, beauty, or family ownership resolves cultural-property, export, import, or provenance questions.

Before relying on market records for japanese antique appraisal, check ownership history, acquisition date, export/import documents, prior appraisals, and whether the object may be culturally sensitive or restricted. Useful official references include CBP cultural property guidance, State Department cultural property restrictions.

Appraisily can help organize identification and market evidence from photos. Legal, tribal, import/export, and repatriation questions should be handled with the appropriate authority or specialist counsel.

What changes value

For japanese antique appraisal, value starts with accurate identification, material, age, condition, and provenance. A mark, family story, or auction title is useful evidence, but it is not proof by itself.

Strong examples usually have coherent form, documented ownership, consistent construction, clear condition, and market demand for that exact type. Damage, uncertain attribution, restricted material, missing provenance, or vague cultural labels can limit confidence.

Auction evidence from Appraisily's database

These records are market examples, not a final appraisal. They do not prove that your item is authentic, lawful to sell, unrestricted, or worth the same amount.

PhotoCategorySaleDateLotRealizedWhat it shows
Market example image for A LARGE JAPANESE PORCELAIN VASE BY YASOKICHI III, CIRCA 1986Japanese porcelainOriental Art AuctionsNov. 28, 2024A LARGE JAPANESE PORCELAIN VASE BY YASOKICHI III, CIRCA 1986EUR 3,000Known maker and date can support a much narrower comparison.
Market example image for JAPANESE IMARI MUG AND COVER, EDO PERIOD Height: 8 in. (20.3 cm.)Japanese ImariPotomack CompanyNov. 20, 2024JAPANESE IMARI MUG AND COVER, EDO PERIOD Height: 8 in. (20.3 cm.)USD 150Period, form, and condition drive Japanese porcelain evidence.
No lot imageJapanese SatsumaAhlers & Ogletree Inc.Jun. 25, 2016Elaborately Decorated Japanese Satsuma BowlUSD 450Decoration quality, signature, and condition shape Satsuma comparisons.

When to use Appraisily

Use the free screener for first-pass identification and market direction. Use a professional appraisal for insurance, estate, donation, sale, or authenticity questions. See the professional sample report.

Related guides

Free Asian art appraisal, Value of old Japanese tea sets, Value of old netsuke, Value of old kimonos, How to identify Japanese pottery marks, How to identify Asian antiques, art and memorabilia, antique appraisals, professional sample report.

FAQ

Can Appraisily identify Japanese antique appraisal from photos?

Photos can support first-pass identification when marks, construction, materials, condition, measurements, and provenance are visible.

Is auction evidence a final appraisal?

No. Auction records are market evidence only. Authenticity, legal status, cultural sensitivity, provenance, condition, size, material, completeness, and demand can materially change value.

Should I clean or repair it first?

No. Photograph the object as found before cleaning, polishing, washing, repair, restoration, testing, or removing old labels and mounts.

Need a clearer answer before you decide?

Upload photos. Appraisily identifies the item, checks real sales where available, and shows whether a free screen or professional report makes sense.

Start with the free screenerStart a professional appraisal