A vase that was once rejected by experts on an early version of Antiques Roadshow has sold for a staggering £53 million after ...
A vase that was initially dismissed as a "very clever reproduction" by a BBC antiques expert on Going for a Song has sold for ...
Back in the 1970s, the BBC launched its antique game show 'Going for a Song,' which paved the way for the now-famous ...
BBC antique experts rejected a vase on an early version of Antiques Roadshow, believing it to be a ‘very good reproduction'.
A vase dismissed by a BBC antiques expert ended up selling for an astonishing £53million after being stored in an attic for 40 years.
In the 1970s, a British couple were told their Chinese vase was a reproduction on the BBC antiques show Going for a Song, so they put it in their attic where it lay for 40 years ...
The vase was first brought on the BBC's Going for a Song in the 1970s, where a museum curator told the owners it was a ...
Antiques Roadshow is available to stream on pbs.org ... And I would call this sort of more or less of a cabinet size for a vase. GUEST: Mm-hmm. APPRAISER: And they range upwards of 12 inches ...
Antiques Roadshow is available to stream on pbs.org ... That curvature typically one only finds on vases that are of cylindrical shape. So it would have been part of the cylinder shape of a ...
A HUGE mistake saw a vase valued at hundreds of pounds go on to sell for a whopping £53million. Airing in the 1960s and 1970s, BBC programme Going for a Song was somewhat of a precursor to the ...
The stunning Chinese vase was a family heirloom when it appeared on the show Going for a Song in the 1970s, but the curator ...
A vase initially dismissed as a "very clever reproduction" by a BBC antiques expert was later sold for a staggering £53 ...