A vase that was once rejected by experts on an early version of Antiques Roadshow has sold for a staggering £53 million after ...
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 ...
A vase dismissed by a BBC antiques expert ended up selling for an astonishing £53million after being stored in an attic for 40 years.
The stunning Chinese vase was a family heirloom when it appeared on the show Going for a Song in the 1970s, but the curator ...
Use precise geolocation data and actively scan device characteristics for identification. This is done to store and access ...
The couple had been told their vase was a 'very clever reproduction' on the BBC show Going for a Song, but it was later ...
A prized Chinese vase dismissed by a BBC antiques expert ... seen as the predecessor to still-running programme Antiques Roadshow. One of the experts appeared unimpressed, with reports suggesting ...
Funding for ANTIQUES ... vase that would have been approximately eight inches in diameter. And there's a special kind of vase that's called a rouleau vase that was made in China, because this is ...
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 ...
A British couple took it on the series (originally presented by Max Robertson) on which ‘connoisseurs and customers explore ...
The vase in question had first appeared on the 1970s antiques game show Going for a Song, a precursor to Antiques Roadshow ... an intricately designed Chinese vase that had been a family heirloom ...
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 ...