Leigh and Leslie Keno

[4] Their father collected and restored vintage sports cars and both parents specialized in folk art and country furniture.

[6] The brothers took interest, were earning $200 or $300 a weekend by the time they were in the fourth grade and by age twelve had entered in their joint diary, "We are Antique Dealers".

[6] Leigh and Leslie own a 1938 SS 100 Jaguar 3.5-liter, purchased from their father,[11] which they raced on the track at Lime Rock Park and which they drove on Louis Vuitton Classic China Run, a 1000-mile rally from Dalian to Beijing.

Leigh opened his own antique dealership in New York City in 1986 and for a number of years Leslie headed the American furniture and decorative arts division at Sotheby's.

The brand, which embodies contemporary design with clean lines, is sold in retail stores throughout the United States and 30 other countries around the world.

In addition, the Keno Bros. brand has a growing presences starting in 2015 in Southeast Asia and China in the form of stand-alone stores in major cities.

In 2011, the brothers co-hosted a reality show, Buried Treasure, on the Fox network[15] in which they visited people's homes searching for valuable art and antiques.

The fund focuses on acquiring the rarest and most desirable classic cars produced by renowned marques such as Alfa Romeo, Aston Martin, Bugatti, Ferrari, Jaguar, Lamborghini, Maserati and Porsche.

The fund's investment manager believes that classic cars with the strongest upside potential are "blue-chip" models with international cachet produced during the 1950s and later.

President George W. Bush and First Lady Laura Bush stand with 2005 National Humanities Medal recipient Leslie Keno on November 10, 2005, in the Oval Office .