GUEST: Well, I brought this rabbit that I was given for my first Easter, which would have been in 1932. My baby book says that I received a brown rabbit that was a nodder. And I assume this is it. And as you can see from the picture, which was taken a couple of years later, with myself and my brother, we've... I've had him all my life.
APPRAISER: He's German. He's clockwork. He nods, if we just do a little thing like that. You'll see his head nods and his mouth moves. Can't really tell you who made them. Sometimes you'll see a label on the bottom, "Made in Germany." But as to the company that produced it, I really don't know. They were made for quite a few years. This could have been made around 1900. I don't think it was made in 1932. Uh, it might have been your dad's.
GUEST: Well, that's what I wondered. My dad was born in about 1909. I wondered if it could have been his, and then they just gave it to me.
APPRAISER: It's sort of hard to date it exactly. By the '30s, this type of thing was sort of going out. This is more of an early-1900s-type piece. It's got a couple of little condition problems here. There's a missing little foot there...
GUEST: Oh, yeah, right. Right.
APPRAISER: One ear's torn there.
GUEST: Right, right.
APPRAISER: And you mentioned something you... used to have.
GUEST: He had a bottle at one time.
APPRAISER: A baby bottle, okay.
GUEST: Yeah.
APPRAISER: These ears are a little bit loose, but that's no big deal. It's charming. It's in fairly decent condition. Did you ever have it appraised at all?
GUEST: I did take it to a local antique shop, show, many, many, many years ago.
APPRAISER: Mm-hmm.
GUEST: To a toy dealer.
APPRAISER: Right.
GUEST: And he said, to the right person at the right time, at an auction, for somebody who collected this kind of thing...
APPRAISER: Mm-hmm.
GUEST: It could be worth $5,000 to $6,000.
APPRAISER: Okay, well, he's a little high on that, because of the condition.
GUEST: Yeah, right, right, right. (laughing): Well, he was in better shape 25 years ago, too.
APPRAISER: Okay, all right, rabbits are very, very popular. Santa Clauses are popular-- all holidays. In the condition it is now, just like this, I would probably sell it for around $4,000.
GUEST: Mm-hmm.
APPRAISER: Once this is repaired-- which, it can be repaired... Say you put another $500 in it, on today's market, restored, he probably would bring between $5,000, $6,000, and maybe even $7,000. Rabbits are very, very, very popular. Everybody likes them. The history's great.
GUEST: Have you ever seen another one like that?
APPRAISER: A friend of mine has one. He bought it in Milwaukee years and years ago.
GUEST: Really? Just like this one?
APPRAISER: Just like that one. So it's the second one I've seen. So thank you very much.
GUEST: Well, it was a pleasure to be here.
APPRAISER: Great.
GUEST: I'm sure, I'm sure the rabbit enjoyed it after all those years. (laughing)
APPRAISER: I'm sure he did, too. He's still nodding his approval.
GUEST: Yeah.