Rob Klaric entered a Mosman op shop to buy a book on Tuesday morning, but it was two old picture frames sitting on the ground that stole his attention.
He didn’t know why at first, but then the penny dropped: he was the young man holding up the Leaning Tower of Pisa in the first picture, and it was his wife Leonie in the other. The photos were taken on the couple’s first overseas trip in 1988 and were lost during a house move in 1994.
“I thought I was hallucinating. I couldn’t believe my eyes,” Klaric said. “I was shaking – one of the workers asked me if I was all right.”
The op shop staff couldn’t believe it either at first, and even they weren’t sure who had kept them for the past three decades.
Rob’s picture retailed for $12, while Leonie’s went for $8 – pricing Leonie put down to her husband, aged 58, being “more vintage” than she. Klaric forked out the money for the frames, which he called “the best bargain I’ve ever found”.
The photograph of Leonie holds special significance for the family. In the picture, she stands outside the home of Klaric’s late mother, who migrated from Italy to Australia after World War II, in her village just north of Venice.
During wartime, Klaric’s family sheltered Allied soldiers in the barn of their home, metres from where Leonie stood in the picture, when the area was occupied by Nazi Germany.
Klaric has visited his mother’s home several times, including with his daughter, whose memory of the place has been jogged by her father’s latest purchase.