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Antiques Roadshow is a British television series produced by the BBC since 1979. Series 31 (2008/09) comprised 26 editions that were broadcast by the BBC from 7 September 2008 – 12 April 2009 [1] [2] [3] The dates in brackets given below are the dates each episode was filmed at the location.
Antiques Roadshow is a long-running British television series about the appraisal of antiques, broadcast on BBC One since the show's launch on February 18, 1979. It is currently in its forty-sixth series, with over 850 episodes to date.
Antiques Roadshow is a British television series produced by the BBC since 1979. ... "Hertford College, Oxford, Oxfordshire" 28 June 2008: 11 October 2009 () 5.62: 5
Raleigh’s ‘Antiques Roadshow’ event schedule Here’s what Antiques Roadshow’s website says about attending an event: • Arrive : Show your ticket to the volunteers at the entrance.
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.
Taping in each location lasts one day, [1] [2] and episodes drawn from that day are broadcast the following year. During the first 21 seasons and for most of the 22nd season, production followed a routine, predictable pattern, with all taping occurring indoors in a convention center, hotel ballroom, civic arena, or similar venue.
However, unlike Antiques Roadshow, the owners are then given the option to sell their items at an auction. Recording BBC TV Flog It!, presenter Paul Martin chats to audience members (Birmingham, 2014) The programme, originally broadcast as part of BBC One's afternoon schedule, subsequently appeared on BBC Two. It is shown as part of the early ...
Sanders of Oxford is an antique print shop situated on the High Street of the city of Oxford, England. Although stores trading in prints were once common in the country, there are now only a handful left, Sanders being one of the largest and longest running outside London. The building, Salutation House, has traded in books and prints since at ...