
Antiques Roadshow
A letter from John Lennon valuable Swedish glass a contraption marked with the phrase "certain death."

A letter from John Lennon valuable Swedish glass a contraption marked with the phrase "certain death."

Items include an opera singer's perfume bottle, a traveling magician's box of tricks and an early animation machine.

A piece of Murano glass inspired by Picasso a collection of 1950s advertising posters the origins of three pieces of tribal jewellery.

A royal portrait by Beryl Cook and artwork by "Pennine Painter" Peter Brook an art deco bracelet a diamond necklace.

The team visits Buckfast Abbey, a Benedictine monastery in Devon, where they find a tiara, a mysterious teddy bear, and a silver platter.

A diamond and ruby pendant an exotic and rare snuff container a chair that once belonged to the Artful Dodger.

The team is in Yorkshire at Piece Hall in Halifax, the only surviving 18th-century cloth hall where textiles were once traded treasures include a Chinese imperial robe, an opal pig and a sapphire brooch.

Items range from an intricate model of a vintage car made by a prisoner of war to an Elizabethan ring found in a muddy field and even a collection of classic guitars.

The team are at historic Buckfast Abbey in Devon, commemorating 1,000 years of worship on the site a tankard dating back to 1703 Adam Schoon shows how a hidden lock in a 1640s iron chest would deter thieves.

At Cromer seafront in Norfolk, the experts uncover two pieces of exquisite Italian design a Chinese vase bought from a London market turns out to be a very special find.

Ornate silver from Iona signed Harry Potter books a unique Brooklyn Dodgers baseball a German art deco figurine an intricate Italian bracelet.

The team returns for a second helping of finds from the Isle of Wight at Queen Victoria's Italianate seaside residence, Osborne Richard Price challenges Fiona Bruce to work out how three clocks have changed in value since 1977.

At Newcastle's Civic Center, Adam Schoon values a child's penny-farthing cycle rare diaries tell the story of Victorian heroine Grace Darling and her mission to save lives at sea.

Fiona and the team return to the historic Abbey Pumping Station in Leicester expert Ronnie Archer-Morgan swoons over some 1960s steel sculptures books specialist Rupert Powell meets playwright Joe Orton's sister who brings in his typewriter.

Fiona Bruce and team are in Belfast at the Parliament Buildings in Stormont Estate an unloved muffin dish holds a surprise Justin Croft spots an unread copy of "Ulysses" John Foster delves into Belfast's 18th-century water system.

Fiona and the team head to Leicester's Museum of Technology, housed in a Victorian sewage pumping station: the Abbey Pumping Station, complete with four working beam engines Mark Hill casts his expert eye over an abandoned sculpture.

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 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.

Fiona and the team are at Newcastle's 1960s Civic Center, an iconic building where everything from the modernist architecture to the public art and the carpets to the chandeliers was conceived by one man.

The team return to Helmingham Hall in Suffolk, where Paul meets a man whose family have painstakingly constructed a working model fairground Fiona has fun with a unique piece of Donald Trump memorabilia: a vanity set from his private yacht.