
Antiques Roadshow
Treasures include a miniature safe, one of the world's first interactive golf games, and a trilby belonging to a 1980s pop star.

Treasures include a miniature safe, one of the world's first interactive golf games, and a trilby belonging to a 1980s pop star.

The Roadshow is at Stonor Park in Oxfordshire, where treasures include a rare artifact that survived the attack on Pearl Harbor and a genuine L.S. Lowry painting.

Fiona Bruce and the team are at Windermere Jetty Museum in the Lake District, where finds include a James Bond poster, a tribal mask and rare necklaces with surprising values.

Finds at Bodnant Garden in North Wales include novelty glass bottles, a pair of sailor's valentines from the West Indies and an ecclesiastical candlestick from a very special cathedral.

A letter from president Eisenhower, the priciest Chinese tables on the show, and a puzzling set of mystery objects.

Eclectic finds include brooches handed down from the royal family, a spy camera, a prop from a St. Trinian's film and a hand-cut paper valentine designed to win a hand in marriage.

Fiona Bruce shares some of the best unseen items from recent travels around the U.K., from rare space memorabilia to a jewel-encrusted dagger and a well-loved rocking horse.

Fiona Bruce presents a special episode of "Antiques Roadshow" commemorating the 80th anniversary of the Battle of Britain and the Blitz.

Fiona Bruce discovers how plant-based remedies were mixed and bottled by Victorian pharmacists visitors bring an eclectic range of items for the experts to appraise.

"Antiques Roadshow" returns to Castle Ward in Northern Ireland, an unusual 18th-century mansion and backdrop to hit TV series "Game of Thrones".

"Antiques Roadshow" returns to the magnificent setting of Compton Verney in Warwickshire treasures brought in include illustrations from the 1930s, bronze statues from Benin in West Africa and a rare Chinese incense burner worth a small fortune.

At Lytham Hall in Lancashire, finds include a chair that is believed to be from Nelson's flagship, a gruesome insight into Victorian dentistry and a fantastic series of watercolors rescued from a skip and worth thousands.

Fiona Bruce discovers what was really inside a 200-year-old bottle of wine that Andy McConnell tasted in 2016 and traces the history of a chocolate treat in the shape of a nurse that dates back to World War I.

A plate from Buckingham Palace, embroidery made from human hair and a traditional Irish wake table.

Treasures brought along include a diamond ring that was bought for a pound, a 17th century violin, the most valuable ever brought to the Roadshow and a unique telegram from Hitler.

A Fabergé vanity case a ring by one of the most innovative goldsmiths of the 20th century a magnifying glass linked to the Pablo Picasso exhibition in New York in 1939.

A sketch by illustrator Quentin Blake, the Duke of Wellington's riding crop and Queen Victoria's chocolate box.

A rare Victorian automaton, a work by L.S. Lowry, medals won by Britain's first Black Olympian, and a briefcase full of artifacts from Ernest Shackleton's 1909 Antarctic expedition.

A valuable bowl, a set of rare SAS medals, and a Vivienne Westwood jacket.

An art deco gem in the suburbs of South London an emerald and diamond bracelet made by one of Paris' top design houses.