All the antique shops I've been in are like weird uncurated museums—nothing but <$20 souvenir knickknacks ever seem to move even with a steady stream of visitors. Like most of the furniture they try to sell, that will still be there in 10 years priced as if it's a high end example of a sought after collectible, when it's an average or low end piece in variable condition that nobody wants (especially when I see plenty of good furniture on the side of the road for free, but people would rather by overpriced Ikea junk to put in a landfill than something quality that's solid wood that can be easily fixed with some cheap tools if necessary or modified to suit taste. My bedroom set is built like new furniture that cost a couple grand for each piece, but looks unique, and it was given to me. I spent $200 modifying and restoring it—most of that the expensive hardware—then <$50 12 years later to update it to match the new house. I added a radio cabinet from about the same year and fixed that up to match with modern guts. Also attained for free.). How any of them can even afford to keep the lights on, I've never been able to figure out.