Antiques Roadshow UK Series 14 Episode 2 at Queensferry, North Wales

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[Music] [Music] this week we're in North Wales just across the border from Cheshire and on the banks of the River Dee the broad estuary of which gradually narrows as it winds its way downstream to Chester and beyond the first safe crossing point over the river long before this bridge was built was a ferry known as kings ferry that was until 1837 when in honor of Queen Victoria's accession it was renamed Queensferry and the small town that grew up around it is our home for the day and this part of Wales was also the home of the great Victorian statesman william ewart gladstone four times Prime Minister in the second half of the nineteenth century Hardin castle was his home for over 50 years and during his administration's it became the Checker's of its day it was in the state where Gladstone liked to spend much of his time and this is how he liked to spend it with this very axe here in the parkland at Hardin felling and trimming the trees now whether that was the venting of political anger and frustration or a genuine concern for the quality of the landscape we're not quite sure what we do know however is that the resulting chips off the old block became much sought-after Gladstone souvenirs and it's said that the wood from those trees was used in the making of local furniture well I have no doubt that some of that wealth of Gladstone memorabilia will turn up here at the Deeside leisure centre where we've set up our cameras today among our experts we have a formidable team Hugo Molly Fletcher and David batty we'll be sorting it through the pottery and pestilent along with Henry sand Simon bull will be looking after any interesting clocks and watches and Hilary K covering her usual wide variety of objects from the 19th and early 20th centuries over on furniture today we already know there are some good things including John Bligh and the propane and with a broad brief to talk about really anything that takes his fancy fees poor Adam let's now join our experts with the people of dfrac little nightlife holders all possible burners for burning past nausea this one this one is a money box which is derived like a little hole puncher by the year yes yes they used it that's from my found abused and he said they were rarer than the others because they put them on him enough to break the pots to get them out I don't know if it's like wouldn't imagine so but that's very nice I'd be the piece like that Staffordshire Staffordshire chip the Ottomans and date said be around about 1860 they're going up fast and some of these pretty little Pascal burners and night-night older that's an absolute Jeffers dude we had this one a long time yes I've had it about 40 years and I built it off an old lady in a shop and she said that you loved it would be dear it's I'm typically and I paid three and six fully a 306 for the air ticket was that Wales yes it was in where I live a lot of nice things found you Wales well three of six books for them well I suppose now that's very before I love the little color of the boss put around the the doorway scraps of clay have squeezed out through a assume and then put on to make the underboss very very beautiful little bees and I suppose that scared to be worth 250 300 pounds so three and six books is it is a little price to pay could I tell you what what is by absolute favorite amongst it yeah it's it's the clock did you like the clock I'm very very fond of it I think it's beautiful that the colors we call Pratt where the this la vida loca ochre color and this blue and the green and it possibly comes from Yorkshire that was wrong they came from my family came from his family came from Stockport that's all that's legacy could well have travelled over the Pennine I think this is a very typical Yorkshire piece of pottery and I don't know how much do you think it's worth no I mean would you be surprised if I told you it was worth something like about 700 to 900 pounds 7900 thousands go back in the glassfish but he did the Dark Age how much did you say 700 cal say about 900 [Music] she was born in 1887 and she did this sort of work well this sort of work is really a wonderful range of decorative furniture the technique she used is I think called pin work she drew a pattern onto the surface of the piece of furniture and then would wash in color and then varnish over the top to create a decorative finish on the piece of furniture is that is that as you understand it yes my mother called it marquetry market I know marble is in labor exactly yes the aim of this was to imitate marquetry and the infested to me in all these pieces is because we see all the attitude to the late 19th century coming out here is William Morris and I'll preserve the shape of the piece is Middle Eastern no mori shark was very popular at the time if we look at other pieces for example this the box here which is a barrier sewing it's a sewing box it's a very Liberty shape it's a sort of different it's a sort of shape of art new their furniture one would associate with a shop like Liberty and she has improved it very much by the addition of in this case the grapes and the vines drawn with enormous skill now one of the curiosities of course is the painting furniture has become fashionable again they were once again are decorating furniture in in this way so we see these cycles of taste going on but it's a bit like a treasure trove I think I'll go a bit and see what we get this is a piece of hard paste Boston from sound and if you look at the bottom now that KEK tells you it was made in 1788 and this is a very rare ground color and this neoclassical decoration is very much of that period and we have the painters mark I think she's a achieve Mademoiselle B knew that that it's a pity about this being broken because otherwise that would be worth well into four figures in 1215 hundred pounds in this condition only maybe two or three and this is a passion that was made at over 40 factories during the 18th century I've got a friend who's got 40 pieces from 40 different factories of this pattern but this is the granddaddy of them all this is a Mason he's made around 1735 nothing to do that's it Italian if this is early my son half of the date and they went on making this this pattern they're still making it today at Copenhagen but lots of these factories men this is a day to day everyday blue and white wear and this is a coffee or chocolate cup of the 1730's without a saucer again worth between one and two hundred I congratulate you there on having found such amusing and representative mints but they're yeah they're not gonna pay a pro would it be in the girl fulfill treasure have you here for example a compass now she'll have bought a standard clock she'll have painted it and decorated it and here we have a spiky sort of neoclassical design yes and what I think is interesting is as we look at all the work every piece shows different design she obviously you say she didn't go to art school but she must be looking at design manual not handle I know she didn't go to an art school but she must have got the design and some and at the time there were magazines with manuals on how to do this sort of work and I'm sure because she use so many stars beaded Art Nouveau we've had neoclassical we've had William Morris all these things coming together yes and where you ponderin particularly yes i love them and there were many more only another one in there oh yeah big round pop this one yes my my mother made that for my father when they were courting was it a tobacco jar this is impossible we've got holly leaves and berries did a Christmas present and it was just does the presence of five I know and she made it for my father I think it's a remarkable an astonishing collection because he told us absolutely everything we need to know about how ladies spent their time in it's an astonishing statement about the tastes and attitudes at that day all these Styles coming together in one person's work I mean a single piece in a shop one would think oh that's quite interesting it might be 20 30 50 pounds if the furniture would be under 200 pounds every piece has a value but I think in this case one one might say lie together the whole lot night fetch two thousand three thousand something like that the importance to me is much more than its a family connection yes and a reflection I think of a very remarkable lady yes I'm very I see a Dunlop advertising figure normally say once or twice a year and they're normally in pretty bad condition but to see to in such fantastic condition is a real bonus when they belong to my father nor actually he was a golf professional at our be involved club in the forties from the forties to the early fifties and keep us wage if they don't laugh correct to part with a couple so that was in the nineteen forties late forties right because these two figures used by Dunlop to advertise their new rubber cord golf ball well in the professional shops promoting the product from about the 1920s and 1930s so by the time your father-in-law got hold of them there have been quite old-fashioned so he must have really liked them yes he did he like the faces on them but you'll be very pleased to hear that a figure such as this just on its own not for the pair but just one in this condition is likely worth between say four to six hundred pounds so if you've got a care of them you're talking about a thousand pounds maybe twelve hundred pounds for a pair of simple mass-produced advertising figures good heavens we've had them in the Attic for five years well that's probably why they've survived [Music] you're a weapons man on confess you wanna see a Japanese shillelagh oh gotta love yourself look on that site that's your shin a knee what's happening inside you've got a snake chasing two monkeys through a grotto there's one's got to the top it's terrific never seen on before absolutely stunning it's got a concealed blade of it as well I haven't I'd be very surprised we do welcome what do you were somewhere in the region of I should think five eight hundred pounds on my certificate just for that just my work good true small object things with Michelle absolutely - opposed Donetsk it yep an esky was the thing you hang on your belt and they these documents all grew out of that idea this was actually particularly nice one very well carved turn his eyes are nicely inlaid I think this is probably supposed to be a rich tile for my house and this apparent break is a force particles are bid it's by masa now who is one of the better cards but the world home for a lot of masa now that was messy now the first miss now the second Mazen Ellen third one port and so on and I dinner which biting his but one could find out hours he dates probably from the first time for the nineteenth century and it's an accepted a nice garlic my guess is that it would probably make somewhere in the region from 1200 to 1500 pounds if your back way because it was open and I know well Dan isn't that lovely the exciting thing is this a family one your phones I don't suppose there's any chance it's a model of his houses that would be too good to be true do you know these architectural models now a very very sort of very collectible and I suppose that today is worth some of the reason of three thousand times is it wonderful [Music] very often the nicest industrial clocks that I've seen and I suppose I'm a little surprised to see it in Queens very well well did you actually get it from is it a family piece it's a family piece and is the interesting history in this much that it came almost by lottery into the family my grandmother went in to buy her engagement ring she happened to be deciding customer she was given a choice of any singing name shop itself and when she chose this cup they tried to talk about what it was obviously the most expensive thing in the shop they don't think so her strong belief is it only sphere these were ever made which is one of the reasons why I came out this morning as far as it being the only one of three I can't comment on that what I can say is that the quality of this particular piece is much better and much more complicated than any of the other plots I've seen this particular plot moving the whole thing is debuggable these move they can be unscrewed retaining yes so that's nice their port and starboard lamps and their their gimbal mounted so that to hard as they would have been on a unreal ship what I'd like to see is what's inside and I'm just going to turn it round because usually the excitement is on the outside rather than the inside but I'll see whether it's it's true to its form here oh that's nice that actually there's a pendulum in there which is all part of the there's wonderful patent law of aged built up over the years if you look steps and on the little figure both the figure at the helm and the one calling the wrote the bottom leg nice from deep color to which he wouldn't achieve if this was regularly cleaved well it's a lovely story and it's a lovely object as far as selling is concerned one would be talking about between perhaps fifteen hundred and two thousand pounds now for insurance you really should be talking about perhaps as much as double yeah I think we've got a very good combination of a seascape and what seems to be a faithful representation of the ship Mars bath and I think that it is probably behind Joseph Perth who was an artist born in Whitehaven and they've worked in Livermore in the 30s yes now he belonged if it's a family picture yes exactly and I quad it when my mother died in 1959 and do you know any of the history of boiler it's been in my family since the defendant yeah must be 1850 yes well there's a Jay Beasley who I've been able to find there's a Jay Beasley who owned the boat it was red veteran built in New Brunswick and then actually was Richard to Liverpool is that watching your body yes and then it was on the T and Australian trades where is the sea why do you care about that I don't see yes but I imaginative but because of the iceberg iceberg yes yes but it's impossible to be to be anchored about it yeah now why don't you characteristics about Joseph Hertz work is that the painting of the bow wave yes also the often incorporate the sistema of sound oh yes yes oh I think we can be fairly strong to music yes now the actual value of the picture I would have thought it would be in the range of some eight to twelve thousand pounds yes I see it's a very nice picture yeah - delightful pieces of Scandinavian furniture where did you get them from from my grandfather or maybe my great-grandfather's home in southern Zealand in Denmark you actually got me from Denmark from family oh right well one is Danish this one the other one is Swedish so I try and explain the difference to you the Danish furniture is influenced by the German furniture in the early to mid 18th century and this tends to be more has flat sides its vanadium worn up like the other one but there are one or two important details on this which make it typically Danish it's got four drawers it's a beautiful made little piece of furniture the drawers open nicely oak line so that's quite expensive you'd expect oak and pine for a reasonably expensive piece of country and Denmark rounded tops the draw nice quality the most important feature I think other feet well it's got and I'd put I see you guys in effort yeah yes what's been bashed around who's any made of guilt port yes whereas it's made to look like your bra very much treasured and what's nice about both of them mister size they're both almost identical size nice quality and just perfect for a small room or house which makes them more valuable certainly this one near us is is to my mind without any doubt Swedish three drawers as I expected a Swedish commode this time the shape is much more serpentine shape sides serpentine front and this lovely canted edge here very sharp nice knife priests edge which is quite sophisticated because that's had to be veneer you actually have to glue them near on those borders not easy to do but the most important thing to my mind and terms of being Swedish is to have these gilt bronze channels running horizontally between the three tour that's absolutely typical Swedish we're talking in both cases for third quarter of the 18th century so the equivalent of late Chippendale if you like it'd be important in the English context that figure figures with family history right right yeah so what do they work small good-quality 18th century commodes both quite rare certainly rare over here yeah any idea of the value I certainly think they're both well he's worth four to five thousand pounds and he little bit more sophisticated possibly there are more Swedish bars around the Danish bars just by an edge and this is a little bit more Sat rarefied probably five to six thousand prices so for insurance they've both got to be in short but higher figure than that Danish and Swedish 18th century and don't let anyone computer about that they're real gems there in England together his most extraordinary it's very hard to beat this for sheer quality I mean it absolutely should excite you how well-made it it's one of those late 19th early 20th century fathers that many factories in the Starcatcher were capable producing and indeed cold war which is what this example is they made for exhibition pieces and for the really top of the range they put all their effort into getting the maximum they could and this one has got such a lot of complex operations on it that they probably would have lost a large chunk of their production before they got one perfect one for a start it's very very thinly passed on dears in bang China they've then pierced the border here and put it over an inner well which is pink and they've done the same here on the base with this honeycomb cotton and then the body is done with these jewels of turquoise which are just are in enamel but it looks deceptively simple in fact to lay that all out so that you get the whole thing fitting and your men are all over the place would take ages to do in the turning right because you're working on three dimensions which are moving in and out and then all the beads are in different sizes and they taper towards the top and the bottom so that would have taken days to produce just Napper to learn so from the very beginning there's a very expensive part ready to get it what do inherit at all no we bought it about 15 years ago not 15 years ago move on I'm an antique sale well I reckon you made a jolly good buy because today at auction in London that would probably make him well done you [Music] I don't need to turn it round to nose by Anton van woo he's such a well-known South African sculptor Johannesburg he lived about 1862 about 1940 long lifespan and this is one of his more famous models called be accused but the power of the casting not only is it technically very competent indeed with the detail of the hair and the face but the sheer magic of the face that he's caught in the sculpture is incredibly powerful when you turn it round standard signature Anton bamboo Joburg si South Africa did you buy it in Africa or my great uncle brought it back from [Music] it's been in the family since this he bought it as a new bran probably almost I'd imagine so yes it would be a cast around 1900 1910 something like that I think you certainly got to ensure this for 10,000 possibly even 12,000 pounds it's such a powerful model they carry on their date May the 6th 1935 DubLi from Lord and Lady Gladstone the Paladin I've caught that's a very strong local connection so what is interesting is that the Gadsden family of course are still based at Howard were giving out to the local schoolchildren commemorative mug the jubilee of 1935 which links very nicely with the idea of Gladstone memorabilia generally because w/e Gladstone of course the prime minister who never accepted a peerage created or inspired a vast amount of commemorative China glass everything else you care to think of he was one of the most popular figures of his age and so it's very nice to find that the image of God stand the idea of that still carries on the diversion [Music] and mother hated it and it was amazing that but she wouldn't let me have it originating but after mother died of course she still had it there and I was very afraid that it would disappear because father didn't like she said it looked like a little coffee beautiful well the little coffee this it's not really nice enough to describe it it's actually one of the best little pieces of Sheridan furniture that you'll ever see really yes this is the famous this is the finest quality of mahogany which is then decorated with satin wood and unusually these are the original corner inlay pieces and the original contemporary shells both on the top and the front and the quality I'll put it down again you can see the legs taper but for they only taper from the inside the outside line is straight and that is a good early classic black and the leg comes up and the taper goes right through at an angle into this crossbar so all of that is wonderful news great news to Remender sculler along here and this depth of color coming up and fading out where you hang and then if we turn it round you've got here the original carrying handle on each side original prices throughout Delta absolutely just wonderful and that little box made about 1785 to design by Sheraton is probably worth today in the region of three and a half or four thousand Oh [Music] [Music] [Music] an English reversed keyless Susie up and down dial pocket chronometer with German you know hair screen and that's the description that applies to the best of English watches it's made by charles fraction who was along with dent and perhaps myth the three best makers of watches in this country until pocket much making died out in the early part of the century the hallmark actually on the case is we see 1911 yes the left 1911 and HMF is the case market at hm crotch rooms own mark as soon as a presentation on the 23rd of July 1922 so it must have perhaps been presented to somebody in your family that was my father-in-law's 21st birthday so it would have been bought from Project fraudulent whether the company as I said to buy watches from now it has a keyless fusee which means that it uses the fuse II which is a mechanism in the movement to equalize the power confusing and barrel with the keyless workmanship reminded without using a key and that's a very complicated mechanism to make it has as I said before it has an up-and-down dial which is here on the front which is the changer this time which what speed running seconds and the dial itself actually has a slightly off-white color and the very best watch is by watching her dials made by a man called Willis and I can I would bet you that if we took the dial off I'm not going to and I'll bet you that I will decide Willis the case has features again associated with best English work silver but the nibs the lives here and the hinges hinges here are in gold you know and then we're coming back to the movement and I say kita Susie pocket chronometer which means a deck and escapement and a Jew in you know hair spring it's a helical hair spring elude steel which has a flat hair spring at the bottom that's all technical features but they they combine to make it perhaps the the best as I said the best quality English work give original box deputy fuzzy put about a wine I would think 3000 pounds laughter so on it [Music] it's a Sherine of some sort I mean do you use it for anything no it's just normal it's made by coal port and a misleading thing about the coal port mark is it says call for ad 1750 and a lot of people think oh I brother pieces you know middle of the 18th century here but this is the mark they used in the 1890s whenever you see the Devon England in it you know it's 18 - the thing I like about this is fantastic collaboration between the Potter who actually designed the bowl and the man who manufactured the foot this isn't that silver-plated foot and the foot was definitely designed with a view to taking that on top it's not a later edition I mean often you see the pieces being married up in this way but in fact the whole thing was designed in one go it's a terrific piece of design this sort of shale cornucopia culminating in the metal finial and that has been reflected on the top part and the whole thing is resting on a canvas leaf face I mean you may or may not like it but it's a superb piece of this it's probably worth from a design point of view so I would think somewhere in the region of bum - 215 350 pounds so it's a very very unusual and it's typical of the wares that were made throughout the 19th century for export to Europe particularly to England this one is actually I think probably are dated about 8 they're slightly difficult today because they continue in the same form for quite a long period but I think this one is probably about 1830 somewhere around that it's what we might describe his country house condition mady's it's had quite a lot of wear to it particularly on the top here that's what you would expect but when we open up there's it's Marvis Lee fitted with carved ivory fitments we've got needle cases we've got a revolving thing here for silks we've got compartments which have got little ivory handles in the form of Buddha's finger Citroen yes that's what that's supposed to be yeah the real joy is this which is survived because it's been kept out of the light the not been attacked by people putting things onto it it's absolutely immaculate standard mirror black black lacquer ground but then decorated in two tones of gold which is an added attractive feature and little touches of red as well mm-hmm we've got a scene of a river with boats houses masses of figures and this boat has got a banner and as far as I can make out that inscription says something like the third military commander or something like that say well I don't quite know I'm offering my Chinese is pretty minimal but if it works absolutely marvelously you see the funny thing is about a piece of furniture like this is that if you broke it out I'm not suggesting anybody would if you broke it up the bits including that framed up are probably worth more than the whole and in this condition it's going to be worth somewhere in the region and a half thousand pounds so very nice kid from your grandpa I think the first image that comes to mind looking at this is an illustration in a catalogue of the Great Exhibition of 1862 and also in a book called modern furniture which published about 1865 which showed a wooden box notice now this is cast-iron and it's probably the best example of this Renaissance Revival I mean it's got everything they imagined in the Victorian time that they had in Renaissance design except I don't think they had hats done but it is a superb example of a craft which is no longer continued to this degree of fineness and also is the original coloring the original patination it's an oil gilding which is rubbed away and bronze to look this lovely whole Holly look like that when it was new one of the most interesting things is that for such a fine one one would normally expect to see that the shield at the top being cast especially with the owner's initials or his pokeballs or something and this one left plain may be intended to be painted but it does indicate that it was made for intended to be sold you know in a shop and that would point to one of the bigger shops an onion it is a superb example how long it's been in the family for for generations fortunate yes right forth we can't have 30 years of generation on average so that's 120 years taking us back to 1870 today so they bought it new resume so that's the junta wouldn't it be made certainly would it be very much before 1860 so that's good and it's done in the same time yes still in the same place at the bottom of the stairs they look at this at every morning no well look at it as a work of art and an example of its type right since it's the best let's have a look at it all over it I don't think I've seen one with a draw their bronze fronted draw absolutely one but it's a lovely lovely thing goodness knows it's difficult to to value because if they're in someone who's furnishing a Victorian house which were cool for them it it would look magnificent design actually doesn't comment I would say six to eight times for insurance very nice all right yes and thank you for letting us stay because it's absolutely wonderful even if you don't like it well you must be a lover of cat do you have any more cats luckily they all pourcel there was anyway these are these are wonderfully exciting really some of them are so hilarious he forever this junk at the top of it is he's is absolutely correct you see the 15 and some of them I mean they gave them the crazy to the very very gorgeously marvelously beautiful this one is very unusual haven't seen a single example of him every true was standing up enter a customer the group captain yeah and this is terribly terribly rare made by Worcester in about Sam in about 1870 and muster haven't made many cats but that's a gorgeous example how long we had him months so he's a pity because yeah I speak really well I would imagine the price is going to be nearer 400 pounds I did jolly well they do what other Wooster cats ever do the Cheshire cat from the Alice in Wonderland if she kept about as well but yeah it's very like this other one here which is mottled by Frieda doughty yeah these are Frieda doubt he gets are they just ordinary cat ginger cats yes and they were made in the 1970s but they cost around about 50 pounds a hundred pounds they also make babies yes but this one is very unused also by Frieda Doughty but he comes from the as you say the series of Alice in Wonderland which was good corn very few of the made and and they're terribly rare he's actually the xishi again yes he's got the snores kneecap latisha camp with the grid user never departed his faith and I suppose he's pretty because he thinks well I'm Deborah and he's a very rare piece well he's shocky be rare people to make up their sets of Allison but there's seven in the sense yes and to get the set they need Cheshire cats and I suppose someone wanting to make up a set is probably going to be prepared to pay a thousand thousand you would have been worse blunder paid but not that much you've done jolly well you've heard that lovely expression like my dad that's exactly what you've done from negative a the moment I set eyes on my something I chose the elephant if anything wrong always delighted a servant while they let you down a little bit and it's modeling it's not the best of mothers earth in itself but the whole thing is so pleasing if they are and particularly as beautiful enamel elephant exactly first it's all silver of course but the main thing about housing was these lovely should be on a panel on the top here each one is in equals entirely different all carved one park of ivory an inset with the various mother that model some of them staying some of the natural but the whole thing is a picture it's Japanese not quite antique it would take from around about the Turner sector but into the first decade of this century so it's not quite up to him to study jack but what do not go it was my grandfather's and he bought it and a house sale in Liverpool just at the beginning of the war but and that's really all we we know about it I don't suppose he kept in the old weapons and I think my father said he paid some somewhere about thirty pounds for it no no certainly no I hope no exactly it's a wonderful thing I believe these lovely dragon Sopranos here the whole thing rises to a dome to cover with the Eagle finial looking at going further than taking out that line it's a little bit what if you like if your party especially with tippers and curtains and as much as you've got all this beautiful work on the outside they never go around the top here and yet when you get to the inside I don't bother to finish off you've got without the soft solver in the back which father left it there you know the thing to me is he should be are my father's if I said to you there's probably turned ten ounces of silver in it if that but you know it's disappeared on the market today is very very sought-after and I could easily and I think I'm may well be being conservative in my view that should make something read about ten fifteen thousand pounds so your father your grandfather did very well with his investment well sometimes you know I'm almost at a loss for words to describe the sort of day we've had here in Deeside today an extraordinary collection of wonderful things and we've met some very nice people into the bargain now where we began of course by talking about Gladstone and I speculated that we might see some other examples of the memorabilia that surrounded him and his great career as a statesman and sure enough a whole collection of things have come in not from one source from various sources why was he so preeminent in this respect Paul because he's probably appears on more of these kinds of things than any other figure apart from Victoria herself well I think there were two great figures in the 19th century Queen Victoria and Gladstone they were the whole history the 19th century wrapped up together he was four times prime minister he called himself the people's friend there was no figure I think in British political history who had had such a popularity wonderful strong face the man yes I mean you can see here the great the great tree cutter the man who was friendly in the village and at the same time the elder statesman par excellence yes what sort of a character was he mean he looks terribly dirt he looks der but they're a record that he knew all the villages he was friendly on all sorts of levels and he was committed to improving the lot of the working man Paul thank you very
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Channel: UK VHS Archive
Views: 54,808
Rating: 4.7605634 out of 5
Keywords: Antiques Roadshow, Antiques Roadshow 1992, Queensferry, North Wales, Queensferry North Wales, Pastel Burner, Porcelain cat, Hall stand, Oriental elephant, BBC 1, BBC 1 1992, Rare TV, Hugh Scully, VHS, Antiques Roadshow full episode, 90s TV, 50fps, VHS 50fps, BBC, Antiques Roadshow Series 14, Antiques Roadshow UK
Id: Esn3FiZuqHU
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 42min 44sec (2564 seconds)
Published: Thu Nov 08 2018
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