Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Miller worked as a consultant to and co-presenter of eight series of The Antiques Trail (Meridian, HTV and Discovery), run on ITV. [4] She had also presented It's Your Bid for the Discovery Channel. She was a regular expert on the BBC's Antiques Roadshow, and also appeared on Priceless Antiques Roadshow. [4]
Graham Charles Lay (Willesden, Greater London, UK, 19 January 1960 [1] – 27 November 2016 [2]) was a British antiques expert specialising in arms, armour and militaria, and military history, probably best known for his many appearances on BBC TVs Antiques Roadshow [3] television programme, where he had been one of the team of experts since 1988.
Sandon joined BBC One's Antiques Roadshow for its second series in 1979 and made many appearances on the programme across 40 years. [5] [1] [3] One of his projects was an excavation at the Royal Worcester factory site. [3] He was also a former curator of the Gardiner Museum in Toronto. [3]
Sandon is a regular expert on the BBC's Antiques Roadshow. [3] When his father Henry died, on 25 December 2023, at the age of 95, Sandon said, "To the millions who tuned in every Sunday evening to watch the Antiques Roadshow, Henry was like a favourite uncle, whose enthusiasm for even the humblest piece of chipped china was infectious." [4]
Barby was an ambassador of antiques on television. [17] Following his death, Bargain Hunt paid tribute to Barby in an episode broadcast on 1 October 2012, with a montage of his appearances shown at the end of the programme. [18] A similar montage by Antiques Road Trip was shown on 5 October 2012. [19]
Antiques Roadshow is a British television programme broadcast by the BBC in which antiques appraisers travel to various regions of the United Kingdom (and occasionally in other countries) to appraise antiques brought in by local people (generally speaking).
Negus was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1982 "for services to the appreciation of antiques". [2] He died in 1985 at his home in Cheltenham, one week after having turned 82. In April 2013 Negus's daughter Anne appeared on the Antiques Roadshow with the Negus family Bible. The Negus family had traced its ...
She joined the BBC Antiques Roadshow and was a regular contributor to the programme for 20 years. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] On the death of her father in 1981, with the marquessate passing to a Canadian uncle, she and her husband became the custodians of Burghley House for 25 years, increasing annual visitor numbers from 48,000 to 97,000 by 2007, before ...