
According to Pontus Silfverstolpe, co-founder of global auction search engine, Barnebys, current sales of antiques and designer furniture is up by 32 per cent, with younger buyers motivated by the wish to bolster their green beliefs, become more cost-effective and invest in individual, quality items.
And with critics arguing that few new collectable antiques are being produced these days, so the value of antiques can only rise, the trend of buying pre-owned doesn't look like it's about to slow down any time soon.
Silfverstolpe said that changes to consumer behaviour, led by Millennials, is driving interest in using renewable and pre-owned items.
Sites such as Instagram and Pinterest are now a huge driving force behind buyers hunger for photogenic, vintage furniture - representing a burgeoning corner of social commerce, leading younger buyers to seek out second hand pieces.
Benedict Winter, a specialist in furniture and works of art at Christie’s auction house recently told The Telegraph: