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Two other spin-off programmes, Antiques Roadshow Gems (1991) and Priceless Antiques Roadshow (2009–10), revisited items from the show's history and provided background information on the making of the show and interviews with the programme's experts. The most valuable item to ever appear on the show featured on 16 November 2008.
The series began as an ultimately unbroadcast pilot in August 2009. This original preliminary version saw the two experts – David Harper and Kate Bliss – each driving a classic car, and free to roam where they chose within a "work-day" time limit (9 a.m. to 5 p.m.) to buy up antiques with their £200 budget, with the goal of making the most profit when entered into auction two days later.
Wonnacott is currently the narrator of BBC TV's Antiques Road Trip and Celebrity Antiques Road Trip. The programmes' format involves two experts (and, in the celebrity version, two celebrities as well) driving around the country in a classic car visiting antique shops and buying objects out of a starting budget of £400.
Antiques Roadshow also made a tour stop in Boston, Massachusetts, in 2000, but did not broadcast footage from it until 2002. The Denver tour stop marked Antiques Roadshow′s first return to a city it had visited previously.(The show had made a stop in Denver in 1996 for broadcast in Season 1 in 1997.) 6: Dan Elias: 2000–2001: 2002
And on Monday night's episode of "Antiques Roadshow," we learned four Edward Weston photographs are worth way more than that. "So all four of the pieces together, if you were to
GIRL: "I think if this were to be sold at a retail gallery today it might be worth as much as $45,000 dollars." OLD LADY: "Oh my goodness. My grandmother would be so happy... she really would."
The song peaked at number two on the iTunes pop chart. [ 11 ] [ 12 ] In 2020 amid the COVID-19 crisis, Ross reunited with his fellow BBC antique experts James Braxton, Philip Serrell and the rest of The Celebs which now included Frank Bruno and X Factor winner Sam Bailey to raise money for both Alzheimer's Society and Action for Children .
Philip Martyn Serrell (born March 1954) [2] is an English auctioneer, antiques expert and television presenter who appears as regular presenter on BBC TV antiques programmes such as Bargain Hunt and Flog It!. He began his career as a livestock trade auctioneer, but he became a chartered surveyor in 1988 to analyse antiques.