The Federalist Card Table that was owned by President Grant I think it was…. The guy that tried to appraise it couldn’t even value it. I think he put a very conservative price on it at $2,000,000 USD. But said it’s really priceless. Was made in like 1730’s Boston or Philadelphia by a famous Carpenter
I love this show. A few years ago I bought a small painting for $3 at a local auction and ended selling it through Sotheby’s for $5800. It was my own little Antiques Roadshow moment and ridiculously exciting.
Nothing beats The Harrison Lesser Watch which was found in a Garage in Peckham in 1996, it was sold for £6.2 Million and gifted the British Maritime Museum.
I remember watching this in my early teens with my beloved late mother on early sunday BBC tv. It was (and still is) such a fascinating programme and 'was the element of si-down sunday afternoon tv....and today for me, full of nostalgic memories.
My own favorite was the Scottish couple who had bought a humble glass flower pot with a flower in it, and who later found out that the flower pot (which the wife had bought for £1, including the flower in it) was a unique piece by French glass maker Lalique. It was sold for, if I remember correctly, £26,000.
I remember that because it was bought at a boot sale and she only bought it for the plant. She didn't like the vase! It was a wax mold, so the design was carved in wax, the the glass poured in so the only way to get the vase out was to break the mold making it unique
I remember in the 80s a lady who bought an old teapot in a jumble sale. Turned out it was worth £20k and she sold it in order to buy her council house for herself.
The background info he is providing is quite useful though, and you aren't allowed to monetise a youtube channel that just shows copyrighted footage. Deal with it!
I do remember the silver trinket hoard, every piece that was brought out was more valuable than the one before. The father used to collect them, which left the family quite poor. Brilliant.
The man concerned was a solicitor who kept his family asset poor whilst he squirreled away the fortune in silver antiques.. When the father died, the family flogged the lot!!
He was a bit of a bastard the father that is and the family was very poor, I know cos Rich (in the video) is one of my best friends, back in the early 90's when they sold the silver we spent the next few years doing festivals together, he got himself an extended V8 landrover which was lime green and we smoked a fair bit of weed too lol
The most incredible "find" I have ever seen was an episode where the episode where this lady came in with pieces of broken pottery which had survived an almost direct hit from an Atomic bomb and two bowls had been fused together because of the intense heat. The expert, Lars Tharp, just couldn't put a value on such a thing and I think it was the only time I've seen him lost for words
a museum piece if ever there was one, it would be a terrible shame if it ever sold for money because people's memories and pain and suffering are almost literally burned into it.
@@Boudicca15 Ha Hahhh🙂is that the English Flag June? I can't see it properly, I think the middle flag, is the Swiss or, Swedish flag🤔 it's always puzzled me June, Because the Red cross is A Red cross, with a white background, yet, There's another one with a White cross with a Red background!! I've Never looked into it to be honest, but, i would like to know the difference and, what they both signify June. Kind regards from Australia, Pete.
There was a father who served as an officer in Europe after WW II. While he was there he purchased several painting. Many years later his children took them to be appraised. The art expert told them that one of the paintings was a very early Van Gogh. They sold it for around $1 million. The children were shocked as it hung in the family home for decades.
My parents were good at finding treasure. Jumped a bin and found an old repainted side table. Worthless? Nope. Edwardian. $3500 4000 at the time. Brass lamps from the 20's cost $10. Value $500.
I absolutely LOVE to see owners get great news. Sometimes they need the money but, if they really love the painting or object, they become torn with the need to relinquish the object vs. their real need for money. What a dilemma.
I cannot remember when it happened, but I remember someone bringing in a Ding table and set of chairs and John Bly going over them in his inimitable way. The owner was under the impression that they were "Chippendale" style and John Bly spent ages looking over them and showing them details that showed they were not Chippendale style, but real Chippendale, but he left the last best bit for last, showing some hidden detail that showed that they weren't just made by the Chippendale company, they were made by the man himself. I cannot remember the valuation, but suffice to say it was a hell of a lot even back then.
i love the antiques roadshow, but trust me if i was on the show and had something valuable, I wouldn't be "Oh wow, that's extraordinary. I'll pass it down to the children" I'll be more like "I'm rich, I'm rich. I'm going to sell it and live my best life" and run around doing a happy dance
I am sure there was an episode in one of the very first couple of seasons where a lady brought in a large Chinese plate which the experts got very excited about and valued at £20-30,000 and then the lady revealed she had several more as it was part of a large dinner service
The angel of the north model used to be in the reception of the company who manufactured it in a scruffy industrial estate on the outskirts of hartlepool. I saw it many times.
Great video. you've remind me of what someone once said💖 "The mind is the man, the poor is in it and the rich is it too". This sentence is the secret of most successful investors. I once attended similar and ever since then i been waxing strong financially, and i most tell you the truth.
I almost Fainted 😿😿😿when i lost my capital. Basically i usually go into any business without been guided. But all thanks to my mentor and role models who has open me up to endless opportunities.
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The one I remember was someone whose grandmother (?) was a goddaughter of Queen Victoria. She (modern owner) brought in a christening present from the Queen - a doll with a complete trousseau - everything from nightgowns to ballgowns and slippers to walking boots. It was an amazing collection - one of those ones where I just wanted them to keep on showing more. I have no memory of the valuation.
The really high value items, apart from the painting, are owned by councils or regiments. I think the Faberge flowers would be in the order of multiple millions today at auction.
I participated in a Roadshow event, and my Royal Dalton ashtray was "unofficially" appraised at $5,000. The appraisals offered by this show are for entertainment purposes, and no written appraisals are offered. A professional pottery appraiser valued my ashtray at $500.
I don't believe you. If they valued items at ten times their real value that would be reported in the press on a weekly basis. They used to say "an insurance valuation" as of course that's higher than what one could expect to get at auction. You could sell that story yourself to the press. I know how the press works and they'd love to make a big fuss out of that. Getting wrong on the odd occasion is normal, but something as common as a Royal Dalton ashtray they'd never give such a valuation unless it was a one-off made for a King.
@@AnyoneCanSee - Firstly, I don't care if you believe me. Secondly, they "offered" an unwritten opinion that my ashtray's stamp (BISN) showed it was an officer's ashtray from the Queen Mary. They asked me if I owned the brass stand that was part of it. My (later) paid-appraiser, who specialized in RD suggested I not schedule it in my homeowners insurance since the value was less than $500. BISN was a company name and this edition was made as corporate gifts for professional colleagues. "Roadshow" sometimes finds treasures. And sometimes, they create them.
There was the old lady who had a "Wally bird", that she had used as a doorstop at one time and was subsequently sold and paid for her council house. It wasn't worth an absolute fortune, but it was to her.
That painting at £100,000 in 1979, for comparison, my parents 4 bedroom house in 1978 was £14,500.......... Cheaper area of the country but the average house price back then was around £20,000.
I take all official appraisals with a grain of salt. I have seen some very shifty behavior by the high end auction houses. In one case Christie's gave me a sale estimate on an early American painting, then once I agreed to submit it for auction, and committed to paying their various fees (insurance, catalog photograph, etc), then they cut the estimated auction value in half. Some people may have nice experiences, and others walk away very disillusioned with the chicanery that goes on.
@@gigip4727 I believe that pre-auction estimates appearing in the nice catalog will affect the final auction price, which is what happened in my case. In the end, I wish I had just kept the beautiful 19th century painting by a well known artist, instead of selling at a lower price, especially after paying all of the seller costs. I don't know how to prevent the large auction houses from pulling this stunt of later dramatically lowering the estimated price after putting their first higher estimate in writing to me. It seems to be a game where they can do anything they want to, to acquire enough seller interest to fill a sale catalog.
The Bartell Fretless guitar used by the Beatles valued at three to four hundred thousand pounds at Antiques Roadshow Battle Abbey was an incredible find, linking back to the invention of the electric guitar by its maker Paul Barth
Wow! Amazing show! This is all so exciting, especially since my Aunt and Uncle had hanging in their Louisiana home for 60 years, the Salvador Mundi. It sold to a Saudi Prince for 450 million dollars. My family never saw any of that money because a man bought it from my cousin, knowing what it was, for about 2,000.00 dollars. I would love to have a print of it , after it had been restored, but I don't know how to get one. I would naturally assume loads of pictures were taken of it. Maybe one day, I will be able to have a print. I definitely believe the man who sold it for 450 million should give my cousin a fine Classically framed print.
I saw an episode one time quite awhile ago that i would like to see again. it was a little blue airplane on a goose neck with clear plastic circles round the wings as propellers on a blue base. Apparently the fellow said they were quite rare to find and he had never seen a plane with them on. I have that plane and it has them on. his goose neck was silver but mine is black.
Check out our NEW Top 10 Weirdest finds on Antiques Roadshow: ua-cam.com/video/9SKgSvhUkIQ/v-deo.html
what is the point of the narrator telling us how much the item is worth, when a few seconds later the clip tells the same
The Federalist Card Table that was owned by President Grant I think it was…. The guy that tried to appraise it couldn’t even value it. I think he put a very conservative price on it at $2,000,000 USD. But said it’s really priceless. Was made in like 1730’s Boston or Philadelphia by a famous Carpenter
Please stop talking
Stop commenting
I love this show. A few years ago I bought a small painting for $3 at a local auction and ended selling it through Sotheby’s for $5800. It was my own little Antiques Roadshow moment and ridiculously exciting.
me too, almost as much as i dislike watchmojo....such a shame to have to try to enjoy these clips while enduring the awful voice over
Who was the artist?
Nothing beats The Harrison Lesser Watch which was found in a Garage in Peckham in 1996, it was sold for £6.2 Million and gifted the British Maritime Museum.
😂 ONLY FOOLS AND HORSES, PRICELESS 🙏
*faints*
Two brothers wasn't it?
There was an Antiques Roadshow featuring an item used in navigation that WAS donated to the Maritime Museum at Greenwich
Always keep the receipt.
I remember watching this in my early teens with my beloved late mother on early sunday BBC tv. It was (and still is) such a fascinating programme and 'was the element of si-down sunday afternoon tv....and today for me, full of nostalgic memories.
Nothing can match that Faberge piece. Exquisite is still an understatement. Perfection.
Agree.
My own favorite was the Scottish couple who had bought a humble glass flower pot with a flower in it, and who later found out that the flower pot (which the wife had bought for £1, including the flower in it) was a unique piece by French glass maker Lalique. It was sold for, if I remember correctly, £26,000.
I remember that because it was bought at a boot sale and she only bought it for the plant. She didn't like the vase!
It was a wax mold, so the design was carved in wax, the the glass poured in so the only way to get the vase out was to break the mold making it unique
Florence Boot , widow of Jessie Boot, the Chemist guy, endowed the church of St Matthieu at Millbrook Jersey CI. The interior is all Lalique Glass.
These finds are absolutely the best fun to watch. I love seeing the unsuspecting guests' expressions unfold.
I’m going up my nans loft lol
Enjoy that🤮
Is that a euphemism?
She lives in a pigeon loft?
Are people dumb? This is how we say it in the UK. "Going up the loft" is a normal phrase
Personally, my comment was clearly a joke. I think many of the others were too. I’m English and fully aware of what a loft is.
The most impressive thing I've seen was a toy wooden pig that was 3,000 years old. It was on the West Midlands episode at the Black Country Museum
I remember in the 80s a lady who bought an old teapot in a jumble sale. Turned out it was worth £20k and she sold it in order to buy her council house for herself.
Lose the non stop interruptions from the narrator and I might watch.
Exceptionally irritating voice, isn't it? Really off-putting.
Was about to say this before clicking away
The background info he is providing is quite useful though, and you aren't allowed to monetise a youtube channel that just shows copyrighted footage. Deal with it!
I think this is what A.I. will sound like. 😂 👍
Totally agree
"This is worth......a million pound"
*crowd gasps*
I do remember the silver trinket hoard, every piece that was brought out was more valuable than the one before. The father used to collect them, which left the family quite poor. Brilliant.
The man concerned was a solicitor who kept his family asset poor whilst he squirreled away the fortune in silver antiques.. When the father died, the family flogged the lot!!
@@fordpopular8792 And good for them - the dad isn't laughing in his grave!
He was a bit of a bastard the father that is and the family was very poor, I know cos Rich (in the video) is one of my best friends, back in the early 90's when they sold the silver we spent the next few years doing festivals together, he got himself an extended V8 landrover which was lime green and we smoked a fair bit of weed too lol
@@KarrierBag at least he didn't waste it then👍
The most incredible "find" I have ever seen was an episode where the episode where this lady came in with pieces of broken pottery which had survived an almost direct hit from an Atomic bomb and two bowls had been fused together because of the intense heat. The expert, Lars Tharp, just couldn't put a value on such a thing and I think it was the only time I've seen him lost for words
It was a man who had picked them up on the outskirts of Hiroshima when he was stationed there at the end of World War 2 - it brought tears to my eyes.
a museum piece if ever there was one, it would be a terrible shame if it ever sold for money because people's memories and pain and suffering are almost literally burned into it.
@@oldfrend who gives a fuck too right they should sell them and make bank
@@oldfrend So? Everyone suffers, everyone consumes.
400,000 for a portrait of Edmund Blackadder ? Well I never ! 😂
Tenuous
Buy a big turnip with the money acquired by the sale
I remember watching the Crawley Silver episode. It was the last segment of the show. I never forgot it and so nice to see it here again.
Van Dick!! must be Van Dykes cousin 😅🇬🇧🏴🇬🇧
OR!! DICK VAN DIKES BROTHER
@@peterstorck5349 or sister 😅🇬🇧🏴🇬🇧
@@Boudicca15 Ha Hahhh🙂is that the English Flag June? I can't see it properly, I think the middle flag, is the Swiss or, Swedish flag🤔 it's always puzzled me June, Because the Red cross is A Red cross, with a white background, yet, There's another one with a White cross with a Red background!! I've Never looked into it to be honest, but, i would like to know the difference and, what they both signify June. Kind regards from Australia, Pete.
@@peterstorck5349 hi it's St George's flag patron Saint of England 🇬🇧🏴🇬🇧
@@Boudicca15 THANKS JUNE!! GOD BLESS
I walk past a Banksy everyday on my way to work. Its a great piece of work, i love to look at it. Its also free!
New church bells? Good Lord😂😂😂😂
I like these shows soo much! Thank You!
There was a father who served as an officer in Europe after WW II. While he was there he purchased several painting. Many years later his children took them to be appraised. The art expert told them that one of the paintings was a very early Van Gogh. They sold it for around $1 million. The children were shocked as it hung in the family home for decades.
I'm pretty sure any Van Gogh would go for tens of millions today.
It did go over $1 million. It came from early in his painting career
But..................spoils of war? (Perhaps looting and theft?) That does not count, does it?
@@Missditabomb He BOUGHT it AFTER the war, there's no way that he could know or not if it was stolen, and there's no way for us to know or not.
The jade tiki found in a pouch in someone's garden was the stand out for me.
They are both beautiful in their own way
1,000,000 Pounds. "Jolly!". Love the reactions!
PAINTINGS PAINTINGS PAINTINGS...MORE PAINTINGS! THIS IS GREAT
My parents were good at finding treasure. Jumped a bin and found an old repainted side table. Worthless? Nope. Edwardian. $3500 4000 at the time. Brass lamps from the 20's cost $10. Value $500.
Van Dick!? Are you effing kidding!
I absolutely LOVE to see owners get great news. Sometimes they need the money but, if they really love the painting or object, they become torn with the need to relinquish the object vs. their real need for money. What a dilemma.
I cannot remember when it happened, but I remember someone bringing in a Ding table and set of chairs and John Bly going over them in his inimitable way. The owner was under the impression that they were "Chippendale" style and John Bly spent ages looking over them and showing them details that showed they were not Chippendale style, but real Chippendale, but he left the last best bit for last, showing some hidden detail that showed that they weren't just made by the Chippendale company, they were made by the man himself. I cannot remember the valuation, but suffice to say it was a hell of a lot even back then.
Last comment by the owner with a totally deadpan response to the £1M valuation - “amezzin ….” 😂
i love the antiques roadshow, but trust me if i was on the show and had something valuable, I wouldn't be "Oh wow, that's extraordinary. I'll pass it down to the children" I'll be more like "I'm rich, I'm rich. I'm going to sell it and live my best life" and run around doing a happy dance
So would most since if you had something really valuable like 10000+ most could not afford the insurance
Then waste the proceeds.
I love a bit of Antiques Roadshow 💙
I am sure there was an episode in one of the very first couple of seasons where a lady brought in a large Chinese plate which the experts got very excited about and valued at £20-30,000 and then the lady revealed she had several more as it was part of a large dinner service
Luckily saved from Mao, and his henchmen.
Absolutely correct. It was David Battie and the owner was totally blown away.
Enjoyed your show
The angel of the north model used to be in the reception of the company who manufactured it in a scruffy industrial estate on the outskirts of hartlepool. I saw it many times.
Great video. you've remind me of what someone once said💖 "The mind is the man, the poor is in it and the rich is it too". This sentence is the secret of most successful investors. I once attended similar and ever since then i been waxing strong financially, and i most tell you the truth.
I almost Fainted 😿😿😿when i lost my capital. Basically i usually go into any business without been guided. But all thanks to my mentor and role models who has open me up to endless opportunities.
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Van Dyke is not pronounced Van Dick!
ridiculous the way he butchered that
For a VoiceOver artist he makes some terrible mistakes, I've noticed. You'd think they'd take great care.
It's not spelled Dyke but Dyck.
@@peterforrest5181 touché :-)
Just in case you haven’t worked it out yet. It’s pronounced Van Dike.
£100,000 in 1979 when a 3 bed house in Central London was £10,000....
Not bad that, in 2020 it was worth £517,404.92 ✅
@@matthewgibbons9975 10 houses in Central London is worth considerably more though (7.5mill+)
Genuinely though that 2:37 was David Walliams in a Little Britain sketch.
The one I remember was someone whose grandmother (?) was a goddaughter of Queen Victoria. She (modern owner) brought in a christening present from the Queen - a doll with a complete trousseau - everything from nightgowns to ballgowns and slippers to walking boots. It was an amazing collection - one of those ones where I just wanted them to keep on showing more. I have no memory of the valuation.
Excellent!!!
The really high value items, apart from the painting, are owned by councils or regiments. I think the Faberge flowers would be in the order of multiple millions today at auction.
Faberge flowers. He was a genius.
that was the most astounding piece of sculpture i've ever seen!
@@oldfrend Agree!! Stunning!!!
How can someone be so ignorant of art that Van Dycke is pronounced Dick? Especially considering the expert in the clip correctly pronounced the name.
I was thinking the same thing.....
thank god someone said something! how cringe!
at least he said bar oak correctly ;)
Don't be a Dick, be a Dycke
This channel is filth
Could watch with all the narration!
If the evaluator sounds like hes gonna cry youre doing good.
... Van what now??. 😂😂😂😂😂
What a faux pas! A name which could more properly describe the commentator.
A Van Dyck - £ 400,000
Banksy garbage - £400,000
Van Dick? Really, maybe do some research before posting these.
I participated in a Roadshow event, and my Royal Dalton ashtray was "unofficially" appraised at $5,000. The appraisals offered by this show are for entertainment purposes, and no written appraisals are offered. A professional pottery appraiser valued my ashtray at $500.
I don't believe you. If they valued items at ten times their real value that would be reported in the press on a weekly basis. They used to say "an insurance valuation" as of course that's higher than what one could expect to get at auction.
You could sell that story yourself to the press. I know how the press works and they'd love to make a big fuss out of that. Getting wrong on the odd occasion is normal, but something as common as a Royal Dalton ashtray they'd never give such a valuation unless it was a one-off made for a King.
@@AnyoneCanSee - Firstly, I don't care if you believe me. Secondly, they "offered" an unwritten opinion that my ashtray's stamp (BISN) showed it was an officer's ashtray from the Queen Mary. They asked me if I owned the brass stand that was part of it. My (later) paid-appraiser, who specialized in RD suggested I not schedule it in my homeowners insurance since the value was less than $500. BISN was a company name and this edition was made as corporate gifts for professional colleagues. "Roadshow" sometimes finds treasures. And sometimes, they create them.
Nice
So the faberge pear blossom I have held as my father was a member of the QOWWY. It is so unassuming but weights a lot
There was the old lady who had a "Wally bird", that she had used as a doorstop at one time and was subsequently sold and paid for her council house. It wasn't worth an absolute fortune, but it was to her.
Those wally birds look just like very wet kookaburras.
i remember that silver collection, quite amazing
I didn’t realise Alan partridge did antiques roadshow.
7:50 Now THAT is a- "a bowl.."
Remember an Egyptian necklace, thought it was from the 1920's during the King Tut craze.Turned out to be an original.
That painting at £100,000 in 1979, for comparison, my parents 4 bedroom house in 1978 was £14,500.......... Cheaper area of the country but the average house price back then was around £20,000.
What a beautiful painting by Dadd! Poor man.
6:00 *The Banksy piece would be worth 5x more now.* 😳
Slipware owl pot with cover, with Henry Sandon as the expert, because it was one of the first big values @ £30,000, and so unexpected.
Elle passe en France. J'adore cette émission. Merci beaucoup.
Van Dick - ha ha ha.
The clip even included how to pronounce it. So cringe.
@@chrishullrocks The clip is wrong. It's correctly pronounced "Van Dike" (rhymes with bike).
@@scobra5941 I'm still giggling at Van dick, but I agree, wrong pronunication
Morons should not make history based videos unless they know how to pronounce the names. At this point I turned it off!!!
Disney better watch out, double whammy for their casting in Mary Poppins 🤣
7:13 that's one of my best friends, only talked to him the other night for an hour and a half, love ya Rich x x x x
His is my favourite story, fair play to his father to have the knowledge to save all that silver..
I love the idea of a van Dick painting!!! I do wish these people would correct these "I Speak Your Weight" computer-generated voices!!
I never knew flowers could be so heavy.
Wasn't The Van Dyck segment from the show "Fake or Fortune"?
Lovelyyy
Van Dick😂😂😂😂 it’s pronounced Van Dyke as in bike
The only dick is the guy narrating ……
As an American, I recognize Rupert Maas from the Top Gear Art Museum episode...
Van Dyke ( rhymes with bike) 🙄sheesh!!
6. A hero.
The Richard dad my favourite
I remember seeing the episode that featured the faked fairy photographs. They were well done.
Antiques Roadshow, or as it's sometimes known:
"Is it worth owt?"
What about the miniature dolls house item - as I remember - that was valued massively, back in the last century?
Van Dick?!?! 🤣🤣
Great Banksy.
8:06 if that is not an older looking and sounding Alan Partridge, I dont know what is lol
It would be nice to listen to Antiques Roadshow instead of your constant interruptions. People tune in for the Content not to listen to you.
I wish there wasn’t any commentary
I remember Richard Hobbs. That was an amazing episode. Seems a long time ago. I remember thinking is this stuff stolen?! Shame on me.
What a bizarre pronunciation of Van Dyck...
You cant beat a Van Dick painting.
Why can no one on any of the mojo channels pronounce any names correctly?
👍👍👍
the thumbnail is from Fake or Fortune not antiques roadshow. just saying. goodnight
Nice video bhe butchering of Van Dyck's name is so incredibly cringy
Banksy is my idol...
I take all official appraisals with a grain of salt. I have seen some very shifty behavior by the high end auction houses. In one case Christie's gave me a sale estimate on an early American painting, then once I agreed to submit it for auction, and committed to paying their various fees (insurance, catalog photograph, etc), then they cut the estimated auction value in half. Some people may have nice experiences, and others walk away very disillusioned with the chicanery that goes on.
Go on. What happened? I have several items I’m thinking of putting up
@@gigip4727 I believe that pre-auction estimates appearing in the nice catalog will affect the final auction price, which is what happened in my case. In the end, I wish I had just kept the beautiful 19th century painting by a well known artist, instead of selling at a lower price, especially after paying all of the seller costs. I don't know how to prevent the large auction houses from pulling this stunt of later dramatically lowering the estimated price after putting their first higher estimate in writing to me. It seems to be a game where they can do anything they want to, to acquire enough seller interest to fill a sale catalog.
The Bartell Fretless guitar used by the Beatles valued at three to four hundred thousand pounds at Antiques Roadshow Battle Abbey was an incredible find, linking back to the invention of the electric guitar by its maker Paul Barth
Wow! Amazing show!
This is all so exciting, especially since my Aunt and Uncle had hanging in their Louisiana home for 60 years, the Salvador Mundi. It sold to a Saudi Prince for 450 million dollars. My family never saw any of that money because a man bought it from my cousin, knowing what it was, for about 2,000.00 dollars.
I would love to have a print of it , after it had been restored, but I don't know how to get one. I would naturally assume loads of pictures were taken of it.
Maybe one day, I will be able to have a print. I definitely believe the man who sold it for 450 million should give my cousin a fine
Classically framed print.
@prayalways (Nice username, btw!!) Wow, that is an amazing tale. Feel bad that your family was robbed, in a sense.
I saw an episode one time quite awhile ago that i would like to see again. it was a little blue airplane on a goose neck with clear plastic circles round the wings as propellers on a blue base. Apparently the fellow said they were quite rare to find and he had never seen a plane with them on. I have that plane and it has them on. his goose neck was silver but mine is black.
Ads after less than 4 mins blew my interest.
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Check out the Rolex watch at Walthamstow town hall
The item that sticks in my mind is the Rolex Dayt9na watch in the American version
"It is worth one million pounds."
"Really -_-"
Wish the voice over had not of spoilt the surprise of hearing from the expert the valuation
The goal from Steven Gerrard's was priceless