GUEST: They're from the Miwok Reservation, which is near Tuolumne. My grandparents had the general store in a little town close to there. Lots of times, Indians brought baskets, and gave them to my grandfather in return for groceries and goods. My grandmother liked them so much, and she became a collector, and the Indians in the area knew that she collected baskets, so they started giving them just to her. I would guess they're about 1900, maybe a little later. They were married in 1900.
APPRAISER: California baskets are a real specialized field of study, because every little valley, there's a different tribal group that did something a little bit different, and so it's hard to identify all of them. We know for sure these are Miwok because of your family and from the turn of the century, so around 1900. This is the ultimate Miwok basket. I've never seen any this big. They're storage baskets for nuts and different kind of materials. These have obviously never been used, they were brought to her just like they came out when they were made. These are not ordinary, and they're almost beyond extraordinary. The patterns are very traditional and pure on this one. On this one, all the shapes plus the scale, they're so huge. When we see these, we expect to see something, you know, this scale. These things are tremendous. Appraisers will go back and look for comparables, and come up with a reasonable evaluation. The problem is, there's nothing comparable. And all of us at the table have sat and gone through all our records. We've made phone calls. People just go, "I don't know." You can tell their jaws are dropping on the phone. With the documentation you have, the history, $8,000 to $12,000 each.
GUEST: Oh, my.
APPRAISER: And that's the very conservative estimate. It's a collector's dream, it's the best I've ever seen ever at any time.
GUEST: Well, they're important to me.
APPRAISER: But they're fabulous, yeah.
GUEST: I remember climbing in them as a little child.
APPRAISER: (laughing) Well, I'm glad they're still here.