Antiques Roadshow
The team return to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, home to the Tollemache family for 500 years, where treasures include a sapphire ring, a Girl Guide sketch by Robert Baden-Powell and a collection of Native American artifacts.
The team return to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, home to the Tollemache family for 500 years, where treasures include a sapphire ring, a Girl Guide sketch by Robert Baden-Powell and a collection of Native American artifacts.
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The team return to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, home to the Tollemache family for 500 years, where treasures include a sapphire ring, a Girl Guide sketch by Robert Baden-Powell and a collection of Native American artifacts.
Fiona and the team are at Trelissick House and gardens in Cornwall with treasures in all shapes and sizes, from a giant chair and an escape pod from a Vulcan bomber, to a miniature sewing kit that proves the best things do come in little packages.
The team sets up camp outside the Parliament Building in Belfast, home to the Northern Ireland Assembly items featured include the walking stick of Lord Haw-Haw, the traitor executed for helping the Nazis during WWII.
Fiona Bruce and the team return to Cardiff Castle, where silver specialist Gordon Foster is fascinated by an elaborately decorated Indian flask John Benjamin reveals that what was thought to be costume jewelry is actually the real thing.
Fiona and the team are at Minehead Railway Station where spirits are high despite the weather as the sun breaks through, the treasures begin to arrive, including a chair said to have belonged to Henry VIII and a Butlins dance trophy.
Fiona Bruce and the team visit the iconic castle of the Welsh capital city of Cardiff the grounds provide the perfect setting, with treasures ranging from a simple pottery jug given as a love token, to an early Hockney print found in a junk shop.
The picturesque location is Queen Victoria's favorite seaside residence, Osborne as the experts set up their tables overlooking the grand gardens with views of the Solent, visitors bring along treasures including some ordinary looking cutlery.
At Floors Castle in Scotland one lucky visitor learns that a family gift is worth a small fortune, but there is a question mark over some 18th-century glass Fiona tells the story of this beautiful building.
Returning to Castle Howard in North Yorkshire for a classic summer roadshow the range of objects brought for the experts to peruse is as eclectic as the people who own them, from a humble terracotta figurine to a rare jade Buddha.
Featuring Black Country Living Museum in Dudley, where surprising finds include a 3,000-year-old baby rattle and a Fabergé treasure destined to become one of the most valuable items ever seen on the show.
On the set of "EastEnders", a celebration of the history of film, music, theatre and television, the team appraise rare and unusual items of entertainment memorabilia, including a script for the first episode of "Doctor Who."
Fiona Bruce and the experts visit the University of London's art deco jewel, Senate House in Bloomsbury Fiona is entranced by a brick from Pudding Lane that survived the Great Fire of London in 1666 some jewelry has expert eyes out on stalks.
Fiona Bruce and the experts are kept busy as they comb through family heirlooms in search of treasure pieces brought include a Picasso-designed ceramic, a locket gifted from Queen Victoria, and a box of silver gambling tokens given in lieu of debt.
Fiona Bruce and the team head to Nymans garden near Crawley. Objects exciting the experts include what is reputedly Mallory's axe from his 1922 ascent of Everest, a sofa that starred in a classic movie, plus a gift from an old boyfriend.
Objects featured include a communion book originally owned by the poet Wilfred Owen, an Aston Martin sports car first driven by an RAF Group Captain in World War II, and a well-preserved finely embroidered stumpwork box from the 17th century.
Treasures brought to the cameras include diamond jewels found hidden in an upholstered chair, a claret jug rescued from the pawn shop, and a banner for Britain's oldest subscription library founded in 1741.
Fiona Bruce and the experts meet visitors bringing family heirlooms to the 18th century cotton mill of New Lanark treasures featured include a pearl necklace bought cheaply at a boot sale, and a valuable clock found in a flea market.
Fiona Bruce and the experts set up camp at Ightham Mote near Sevenoaks in Kent among the treasures brought to camera are a gold ring containing a lock of Byron's hair, and a boot sale find of two Chinese paintings.
Fiona Bruce heads to the medieval manor of Ightham Mote near Sevenoaks family heirlooms pored over by the experts include a set of gold and porcelain false teeth from the 1850s, Sir Walter Scott's walking cane, and two very old cricket bats.
Fiona Bruce and the team head for the beautiful gardens of Trelissick near Truro in Cornwall objects under examination by the experts include a bust of Churchill found at the bottom of a lake and a group of medals owned by a proud grandson.
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