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    Estate Solutions

    5.0 (1 review)
    Open 8:00 am - 5:00 pm

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    6 months ago

    Rosa and her team were terrific partners in selling my mother's antiques. We really appreciated their hard work and support! Recommended!

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    Vintage Queen - Vintage Drexel Furniture

    Vintage Queen

    (9 reviews)

    $$

    I was looking for a chair to have Santa sit in for a fundraiser at my business and found the…read moreperfect chair. I have never had so much fun shopping in a store like this. The staff is friendly always willing to help and do it all with a great sense of humor. It's important to enjoy where you work and is seems everyone here is really encouraged to be themselves and have fun.

    I found this shop from a post they had on Instagram. I'm always down for a shopping adventure at a…read morestore with vintage goods in it. So, my daughter and I made our way in to see what kind of neat treasures we can find. Walking in, it's quite overwhelming. It's a good sized store front but they have a lot crammed onto the sales floor. We made our way through through the store and they have some pretty pieces available. Tea sets, furniture, clothes. Surprisingly, I was quite taken back on some of the pricing her. I found an old birdcage and they wanted almost 200 bucks for it. That is some crazy business. Some salad bowl sets were 10 cause I couldn't imagine pricing anything above that. A tea set for 175 dollars. As full the store was with product, nothing really stuck out to me. To be honest, this place had a thrift store vibe with crazy pricing. Is everything vintage? No. It's a neat store if you're willing to maneuver your way through all the clutter. The pricing is out of this world and you can probably find similar things at the Idaho Youth Ranch for a quarter of the cost. It was neat that we made it in to check out but it just wasn't my cup of tea.

    Estate Sales & More

    Estate Sales & More

    (4 reviews)

    A friend introduced me to estate sale shopping and I have been hooked ever since. I ALWAYS look…read moreforward to Tammy's as it is clear that she loves her work. Everything is so surprisingly well organized given the huge responsibility of taking her clients' whole life of gathering and making me want to buy those things I didn't know I needed. Her staff are beyond capable and friendly...I even get hugs when I walk in. That's the personal side, now the professional. Being in Real Estate, I've had the occasion to take a few items to her for sale. Without a doubt, I know she is fair and honest. I do not hesitate to hand out her card. That friend who introduced Tammy to me met her while having the tough job of clearing out her own mother's estate. Chaos? Of course, but how well controlled that chaos is is paramount. Dozens and dozens of people milling around a house full of stuff...but that's the fun part. I highly recommend Boise Estate Sales & More whether you want to have a day of fun seeing what other people keep or are in need of her services, Tammy is one I recommend.

    Here is your review Tammy. Don't worry, it will be 100% accurate as you rudely said to me after you…read morerealized you would be receiving one. Just purely facts. Today I went to your estate sale with one item in mind that I wanted to purchase. I showed up 2 hours early to wait in line for my chance to purchase the item. I was 3rd in line. Tammy's "rule" for this estate sale was that you do not pull a tag off an item to claim it. My question to you is, how do you know who is first to an item (especially a large item which this was) if you do not pull a tag off of it??? 5 minutes prior to the estate sale opening, I heard a customer in line ask an estate sale employee the same question and the employee asked which item he had in mind. Just so happened, it was the same item I specifically was there for. The employee then told him no problem and that she would mark it sold to him. So basically, she pre-sold the item prior to the start of the sale. How is this fair!? You are telling me that anyone can show up, no matter their place in line, tell you what item they want and you will pre-sale it to that person? Shouldn't it be first customer to the item!? I would highly suggest going to estatesales.org to review common estate sale guidelines which clearly states "first come, first served" as well as absolutely no pre-selling. Which should be common sense to anyone that has ever been involved in estate sales as well as anyone participating as a customer. I went for the item regardless, was first to the item and pulled the tag off the item to claim it, as the idea of pre-selling items at an estate sale seemed ridiculously unfair and unethical to me. When I attempted to claim the item, Tammy initially asked who was first to the item and who had the tag. Both being me. She then said that the item was mine. The other customer, who the item was pre-sold to, reminded her that she said no tag pulling to claim items. I pleaded that I was still first customer to the item and asked how are they to tell who was first to an oversized item if you don't pull a tag off of it? The other customer being the manipulative weasel that he was, then told Tammy that he already made arrangements with the employee to purchase the item. Which was correct, but failed to mention this was prior to the estate sale even opening. Tammy then told me the item would be sold to him and would not hear me out on why pre-selling is a completely unfair and unethical practice. At this point I felt completely cheated and I expressed how b.s. the entire situation was. By Tammy's lack of organization, common sense guidelines as well as her sole desire to move inventory at any unethical cost, this event was a complete sh*t show. I asked for a card several times and the staff refused to provide one. I located one on their desk as her cashier sarcastically told me to "have a blessed day" and that I "was gonna need it". Mocking religion by twisting it to portray the opposite message is just a disgusting and hypocritical behavior in my opinion. Ultimately this would have all been avoided if two rules of thumb were followed: 1) No pre-selling! Keep it fair for everyone to have a chance to get the item they are after. It is completely inconsiderate to all the people who take their time to go to estate sales, to allow an individual customer to schmooze one of your employees into selling them an item early. Customers should all be treated fairly without bias or favoritism. Customers should not be allowed to manipulate or schmooze estate sale employees for insider knowledge or help that will give them an unfair advantage over the other customers. 2). There must be tags on large items. Or else there is no way to tell who got to the item first. Even though I pulled the tag and touched the item first by a long shot (first come, first served) I was still told the item was already sold. See rule #1. Pretty simple, fair and common sense rules I would think. How's that for accurate Tammy?

    Estate Solutions - estateliquidation - Updated May 2026

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