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The Strange Story of Makino Chapter 1 Searching for the Dragon in the Tomb Pan Jiayuan


In Ghost Blowing the Lantern, Hu Bayi and Fatty Wang embarked on the road of finding gold, all because they encountered a big gold tooth in Panjiayuan Antique Market in Beijing.

Later, Hu Bayi and Fatty also settled in Panjiayuan and started business.

It can be said that Panjiayuan is an important link in promoting the development of the story.

This incident should have happened in the early 1980s, and there was no such market at that time.

This plot was adapted according to the needs of story development.

The real "Panjiayuan Flea Market" is located in the southeast corner of Beijing's Third Ring Road.

Its prototype originated in the first half of 1992.

At that time, some local laid-off workers set up stalls on the slope of the road southwest of the current location, selling old furniture, old electrical appliances and other second-hand goods at home.

With several stalls and dozens of stalls, the market slowly took shape and was officially named Panjiayuan Flea Market.

The naming of "Second Hand Market" was obviously deliberate.

"Antiques" and "Cultural Relics" are too eye-catching, and "Handcrafts" does not explain the problem.

The meaning of "Second Hand Goods" is much broader, and can include miscellaneous items from various antique shops.

Among them, and now it is no longer limited to this, even some products of the "" period and various ethnic handicrafts are also operated by some people.

Now you can take a look at antique furniture, the four treasures of the study, ancient calligraphy and paintings, old books and periodicals, ceramics, Chinese and foreign coins, bamboo and wood ivory carvings, Buddhist tokens, "" relics, Chairman Mao badges, posters of revolutionary model operas, etc.

Comic book novels, authentic calligraphy and paintings of Ming and Qing dynasty or modern celebrities, pottery from past dynasties, various authentic and fake ancient jades, fake bronzes, old clocks and old jewelry, and all kinds of second-hand goods can dazzle people. .

Nowadays, when foreigners come to Beijing, in addition to climbing the Great Wall and eating roast duck, the most important thing is to visit the Panjiayuan Flea Market.

Foreigners coming to Beijing from all over the world like to come here to shop for treasures, which is also one of the characteristics of this place.

Da Jinya is proficient in all kinds of things, and what he does is "miscellaneous", not limited to gold, stone and jade.

He calls his business "antique business".

In this business, jargon is the most basic means of communication, from introductions to reviews. , bargaining, buying and selling, all have their own formulas.

If you don't even understand these, don't expect to be famous in Panjiayuan.

In addition to these jargons, there are many rules to pay attention to.

For example, if a buyer and seller want to trade a piece of artifact, they have to let someone see the goods first, so the seller has to take out the artifact.

But don’t worry, the exposed object cannot pass through the hands and cannot be handed directly to the person who wants to see the goods.

The seller must first place the exposed object on the table.

At this time, the buyer who wants to see the goods can reach out and pick it up from the table to watch. .

This is done to prevent things from falling to the ground and being damaged, and to clarify whose responsibility it is, especially porcelain and jade, which must not be handled directly.

Uncle Ming, a Hong Kong businessman who resells antiques, and Da Jinya are both people in the antique business, so they both know this rule.

These are all conventions and unwritten rules.

Compared with these rules, terminology is more professional.

To a layman, it is like listening to a book from heaven.

For example, jade is called "green head" and jade is called "stone".

Calligraphy and painting are called "pieces of paper", reproductions are called "laying eggs", and those sold to foreigners are called "foreign villages" , selling to the domestic market is called "honzhuang", exchanging things is called "fighting", receiving good things is called "eating the elixir", making the first business is called "opening", collecting antiques from other places is called "shoveling the land", and imitations If it is not done well, it is called "judging the eye", and so on, it is difficult to explain, and it can be written in a dictionary.

What I just mentioned are all what experts say when trading with experts.

If you encounter a buyer who doesn’t understand these jargons, he will be a "caitou".

If Caitou wants to ask, he will have a very smooth formula to deal with it.

If you ask this question, If you ask which dynasty something is from, he will tell you that it is "Ming style", not the Ming Dynasty.

If you ask where the goods come from, the standard answer is "Shanxi Houma".

The fakes in Panjiayuan are generally That's the rhetoric.

The jargon terms in the antique industry were also produced in the late Qing Dynasty.

However, today, some ancient jargons are no longer applicable and have been gradually eliminated.

Nowadays, there are very few preserved ones, and most of them are produced in modern times.

The new terminology is very different from the previous jargon.

For example, the same noun and verb in jargon may have different meanings in different eras or different regions.

Some call people who go out to collect antiques as "shovelers", while others call them "guerrillas" and fake goods.

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They are also called "Gao Lao Ba" or "Gao Ba Ye", and in order to avoid being jealous of others by revealing that "Bai" means money, when explaining the price, they always say one percent.

When talking about one dollar, in fact It's one hundred yuan, and one hundred yuan is ten thousand yuan.

Nowadays, there are always experts to appraise the value of antiques.

In fact, it is difficult to say the value of antiques.

It is common for antiques to have a market value but not a price or that they have a price but no market.

It doesn’t matter how much the seller says a thing is worth.

If no one buys it, it is not worth it.

It only has this value if the buyer approves it.

Moreover, it is difficult to distinguish the authenticity of antiques.

There are too many counterfeiters.

Even experts may make mistakes.

The Beijing style language is usually called "buying in ignorance and selling in ignorance".

To put it bluntly, it means "buying a cat through the pocket."

In short, the Panjiayuan flea market is such a free market that allows buyers and sellers to display their vision, financial resources and courage, and compete with each other in wits, words and psychology, which is full of drama.

In this market, many legendary-sounding stories have happened, and many treasures have surfaced.

If you have time, go shopping here, and maybe you will find something that is like pie in the sky.

Maybe I'll let you catch up

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