Is your home Covid testing kit a future money-maker? Expert predicts pandemic memorabilia will soar in value, with Sir Captain Tom Moore's autograph worth £25,000 by 2121
- Antique experts have predicted everyday items from this year could be viewed by future generations the way we view Word War memorabilia
- Items predicted to soon be valuable include a Covid home testing kit, vaccine certificate and letters from the Government about shielding
- Bigger ticket items include a signed Captain Tom Moore book, predicted to be worth £25K by 2121 and face masks worn by celebrities such as Kim KardashianItems that have become commonplace during the pandemic - including Covid testing kits, vaccine cards and letters about shielding - could soon be valuable antiques, say experts.
Online marketplace site LoveAntiques.com predicts that many items considered everyday during the pandemic could be appearing on an episode of Antiques Roadshow in a hundred years' time.
Big ticket items include Sir Captain Tom Moore's autograph, which is predicted to cost around £25,000 by 2121.
Face masks worn by celebrities, including Kim Kardashian and Meghan Markle, could ask up to £15,000, and the wooden podium used for press updates from Downing Street at the height of the crisis would fetch £4,000, they estimate.
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History: Literature and home tests (pictured) sent out during the pandemic could be valuable memorabilia in a hundred years' time, antique experts predict
The wooden podium where Prime Minister Boris Johnson delivered his daily briefing at the height of the pandemic could be worth £4,000 in 2121
Pandemic icon: A book with Captain Sir Tom Moore's autograph on it could sell for a whopping £25,000
Meanwhile, an edition of a national print newspaper from March 23rd 2020 - when lockdown officially began in England - could set you back £275.
The experts identified items that are deemed pedestrian at the moment but will be fascinating to people 100 years from now - and estimated their potential value. Keeping items in pristine condition is key to ensuring future value, with dog-eared letters less likely to reap rewards.
Thomas advised: 'It’s important to store any products in dry, cool places without risk of water damage, or colour fading from direct sunlight.
'The area they are stored in should be a consistent temperature, especially not too humid.
'It was also stated that it is an extremely good idea to invest in waterproof cases for valuables, not only will this provide an extra layer of protection it will ward off dust and lessen the chance of mis-shapen items.'
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