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The Antiques Riviera S01E03 Episode 3 Engsub
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00:03It's a truth universally acknowledged that no one does antiques quite like the British.
00:11And nowhere in Britain does antiques quite like the English Riviera.
00:15It is the antique capital of the UK.
00:18In this sunny corner of the world that sparkles it with opportunity.
00:24Who knows what could be in here?
00:27Where trading in treasure makes the world go round.
00:30That's fantastic.
00:32Attracting customers from far and wide.
00:34Wow, look at that. That's pretty cool.
00:37Whether buying.
00:38I'm happy at 500.
00:41Or selling.
00:42If the price is right, everything's for sale.
00:45There's a dealer for every type of antique here.
00:48Wouldn't it be marvellous if it was a real Picasso?
00:51Some do it for love.
00:52If anyone ever asked me what my job title is, I'm actually a treasure hunter.
00:55514 pounds.
00:56Really?
00:57Others for the money.
00:58If we were in the region of say 5,000 to 6,000.
01:00I would have thought it should go for more than that.
01:02It's more than just a job.
01:03There's a little bit of me in the shop and there's a little bit of everything.
01:06It's a way of life.
01:08A state of mind.
01:11Welcome to the Antiques Riviera.
01:25Like bees to a honeypot, the Antiques Riviera attracts hunters and sellers from across these hallowed isles.
01:32Do you think that's Witsum over there?
01:35Looks like we're getting close.
01:37Absolutely stunning.
01:40It's where dealers gather.
01:42I would say 300.
01:46300 will have them.
01:48And collectors congregate.
01:49Oh, Mr Bond.
01:51I've been expecting you.
01:53Or looking for those unique pieces of history.
01:56That's fantastic.
01:58I've never seen that before.
02:00At the right price.
02:02Best price on the box is a 90.
02:05What shall we do with a drunken sailor?
02:09What shall we do with a drunken sailor?
02:12Brixham Harbour.
02:14Steeped in maritime history.
02:19And home to former QE2 steward and nautical specialist, Bob.
02:24I retired in 2014 and I decided that I didn't want to sit at home.
02:29So I thought I'd try a little antique shop.
02:33Or should that be cafe?
02:38I've always been very keen on antiques, especially marine antiques.
02:44And it developed into this.
02:46I wanted to create something that's unique.
02:49I wanted to create something where people could come and view and look around.
02:53And the wow factor.
02:56This is my favourite piece.
02:58The blanket is from the Olympic, which is a sister ship to the Titanic.
03:03I wanted to be able to let them use the antiques.
03:06Some of the china we use and some of our specialist afternoon teas is antique.
03:11It's over 120 years old.
03:13Persis rum, made in Tortoa in the Caribbean.
03:17It was made for the Royal Navy primarily.
03:20You love rum?
03:21I love it.
03:23Personally.
03:24Cheers.
03:25Bottoms up, Bob.
03:28Fresh arrivals to the Riviera are landlubbers Amy and Laura.
03:32And they have treasure to sell.
03:34Look at the pirate boat.
03:36That's interesting.
03:37I don't know what's on that.
03:38Pirates?
03:39Yeah.
03:41Or drunken sailors perhaps.
03:45I wonder if it's down here, do you think?
03:47Yeah.
03:48Oh no, that's the tea room.
03:49Oh no, it is.
03:50There's antiques as well.
03:51Wow.
03:52It's all about antiquing in style on the Riviera.
03:56Hello.
03:57Good morning.
03:57Hi, good morning.
03:58Table for two?
03:59We've got some antiques we'd like to sell.
04:01You'd like to see the owners?
04:03Yes.
04:04Would you like to come with me?
04:06Laura and Amy are two sisters from Froome in Somerset.
04:10They're making the 200 mile round trip to the Riviera in honour of their dad.
04:15I think when I was a baby, he used to like manage our local football team.
04:20The deal was that he was allowed to carry on doing that.
04:23But he had to take me.
04:24So I think at six months old, I used to be propped in the kit bag.
04:27Or like being, you know, those massive old prams.
04:30I'd be in one of them.
04:31He'd be like managing and one of the subs would have to run me up and down the line if
04:34I was crying.
04:41Laura and Amy lost their father during the Covid pandemic and found that he'd left them an intriguing slice of
04:47family history.
04:50We had two weeks to clear out the flat.
04:54And like as we were going through all of the stuff, we found like a plastic box and we kind
04:58of opened it up.
04:58And like, oh, when we tell our friends we've got it, they can't believe it.
05:06I think someone that would want to buy our item, someone that's probably a royalist and like, you know, has
05:12royal memorabilia already.
05:14Yeah.
05:14I think that would be the type of person that would probably, it would mean something to them.
05:18Because it is a piece of history, really.
05:21Well, if it's a dealer with a penchant for pomp and ceremony you're after, Bob's Coffee Shop and Antiques Emporium
05:27looks like a grand place to start.
05:29Hi, I'm Bob.
05:30Amy.
05:31Nice to meet you.
05:31Hi, Amy.
05:32Hi, Laura.
05:33Nice to meet you.
05:33How are you doing?
05:34I'm all right.
05:35So what have you got for me then?
05:37We think we've got something quite interesting for you today.
05:39Yeah.
05:39OK.
05:40We love interesting.
05:42That's going to help.
05:43It's quite unusual, isn't it?
05:44Yeah.
05:44Very unique.
05:45Has it got a nautical flavour?
05:46Yeah.
05:48What is in that bag?
05:49Oh, you brought your lunch?
05:50Yeah.
05:51I'm not sure I'd want to eat it.
05:53What on earth is this?
05:56Buckingham Palace.
05:57Oh, I know what this is.
06:01You're brave.
06:04Inside the lunchbox are three slices of royal wedding cake.
06:07But are they Bob's cup of tea?
06:10Oh, look at that.
06:11That is amazing.
06:12Look at the condition.
06:13The smell.
06:14That's superb.
06:16Well, I've never had cake as old as this in the cafe before.
06:21And it smelled like old socks.
06:24But it's piqued my interest because it's the royal family.
06:30And I love anything to do with the royal family.
06:34Yeah.
06:34We've got three different slices.
06:36From different weddings.
06:37Yeah.
06:38Three slices.
06:39Oh, you are blessed.
06:43First out of the box is Princess Anne and Mark Phillips' 1973 wedding cake.
06:48She's eaten a bit.
06:51That's like Anne.
06:52Yes, I can imagine she would.
06:54Followed by...
06:55A and S.
06:56Yeah.
06:56Andrew and Sarah.
06:57So can you guess whose wedding that one was?
06:59Charles and Diana.
07:00See it indeed.
07:01Who is that?
07:02Charles and Diana.
07:03Yeah.
07:04Charles and Diana had over 20 wedding cakes.
07:07But the one served at their reception at Buckingham Palace was a traditional fruit cake with a naval twist.
07:14As a nod to the then Prince of Wales time in the forces, it was created by the Royal Navy's
07:19Chief Petty Officer David Avery.
07:22It was a super yacht of a cake. Standing at five feet tall, the five tiers tipped the scales at
07:28130 kilos, roughly the weight of a ship's piano.
07:34Now, what's the...
07:35That's all about it.
07:36I was rather hoping you got one from Wallis Simpson's wedding. Now, that would have been really mega books.
07:45But more likely to be found on the French Riviera than this one.
07:51The Antiques Riviera stretches along 22 miles of sunny Devonshire coastline and nestles up into the shadows of Dartmoor.
07:59Where you'll find the market town of Ashburton.
08:10Lydia owns In A Nutshell on the High Street.
08:13She's often out and about buying antiques for her carefully curated shop.
08:19When I'm in the workshop or out buying or delivering, my mum Lorraine covers the shop for me.
08:26She has been working with me for about three or four years now and it's brilliant.
08:33Oh, she'll be here any minute. She'll be here any minute. She will walk in the door as glamorous as
08:38ever.
08:39She does not come from a sales background, but she absolutely loves talking to people.
08:45She could talk the hind legs off a donkey and that is fantastic.
08:50Do you remember that time you swam with Newfoundlands?
08:52I do.
08:53You had to pretend to be drowning so that a Newfoundland could save you.
08:57Yeah.
08:57You and your little pirate t-shirt. Oh, you look so cute.
09:02This is why they say don't employ your mother. I know.
09:04Mums know all the secrets and have very long memories.
09:14Wending their way into the Riviera are another glamorous mother and daughter duo, Anne and Kerry.
09:20It's absolutely stunning.
09:22Oh.
09:23That's why they call it the Riviera, right?
09:25Exactly, yeah.
09:26Gosh.
09:28They have a car full of heirlooms to sell and hope they hold more than just sentimental value.
09:40Gosh, what's that noise?
09:41I hope it's not the plates in the back.
09:44I don't know when I will.
09:45I'll get a little smash.
09:48We're trying to sell mosaic, not plates.
09:52Anne and Kerry need to turn their treasure into cash and are looking for a dealer who will
09:57offer them a good price for their items.
09:59But will anyone want to buy what they have in their boot?
10:03I love them and I know a bit about them, but they're not something I'd buy.
10:06I love them.
10:16Hey, you all right?
10:17Hello.
10:18How are you doing?
10:23Antique enthusiasts travel near and far to try their luck in the Antiques Riviera.
10:28So what do you think then?
10:30It's an interesting collection.
10:38Making their way with a boot full of heirlooms to sell are mother and daughter, Anne and Kerry.
10:44We finally arrived.
10:47And it's sunny and that's the morning.
10:49Beautiful day.
10:49Yeah, it's great.
10:51After a long journey from South Wales, they're refueling before they hit the Antiques Trail.
10:57You can't come to Devon and not have a cream to you.
10:59Jam first, I prefer the jam things.
11:01But I'm not telling anybody here because we're in Devon.
11:04You're in good company.
11:06The late Queen took her scones jam first too.
11:10I can't wait now to hit the antique shops.
11:12I think we've exhausted the ones in Wales.
11:15Both ladies were encouraged in their antiquing habit by Anne's husband, Paul.
11:19We used to like to go to antique fairs, hence the collection of antiques I've got.
11:24The pair spent 30 years building their collection and life together.
11:28There was just one thing they felt was missing.
11:30We decided to get married at Christmas and it was magical, wasn't it?
11:35One of the best days of my life, apart from you being born, my dear.
11:39But nine years later, as the couple were planning a second honeymoon, tragedy struck.
11:48Well, it's not been easy, as you know, losing Paul.
11:52I am sorry.
11:56You sink or swim and you get knocked down, you get up again.
12:01And this is what we'd like to do now is to try and make some money to do that trip
12:07in memory of Paul.
12:10Anne's grand plan is to take Kerry and her husband, Geraint, on a no-expense-spared cruise to celebrate Paul's
12:16life.
12:17I wonder how much we need to raise, really, for this cruise.
12:21It was quite a lot.
12:21I would think about 8,000.
12:25That much.
12:26Fingers crossed the Antiques Riviera will deliver.
12:38You never know what your day is going to hold being an antique dealer.
12:43It's the surprise of not knowing who you're going to meet, what you're going to see.
12:50Ashburton is home to a dozen antique shops, eight of them nestled shoulder to shoulder along the High Street.
13:01It's just lovely, isn't it? Beautiful.
13:03That looks a lovely antique shop.
13:05Our Welsh mother-daughter duo have plenty to choose from.
13:09Every shop in Ashburton is different.
13:11You won't walk into two shops that look the same.
13:13We all have our different interests, our different styles.
13:17I think it boils down to the fact we all buy what we like and we all like different things.
13:24Lydia's antique shop has caught our seller's eye.
13:28Hello.
13:29Good morning.
13:30Hi there, I'm Lydia.
13:31And I'm Anne.
13:32Nice to meet you Anne.
13:33This is my daughter Kerry.
13:34Hi Kerry.
13:34Hello and I'm Lorraine.
13:35In a nutshell, Antiques is a big shop in the centre of Ashburton, specialising in furniture, lighting, paintings, some smaller
13:45pieces as well like ceramics and silver.
13:48It's varied and there's nothing I'd say I wouldn't buy.
13:53But will Lydia buy all of Anne and Kerry's bootie today?
13:57These are beautiful.
13:59It's a Welsh tapestry.
14:01Yeah, proper Welsh blankets all the way from Wales.
14:04Yeah.
14:05You don't see these very often actually outside of Wales.
14:08No, you don't.
14:08So it's lovely.
14:09Are they pieces you've had a long time?
14:11Are they from my son-in-law's family?
14:14Yeah.
14:14Is that your husband's side of the family?
14:16Yes, his grandmother and possibly great-grandmothers.
14:19Oh, fantastic.
14:20Being passed down through the generations.
14:25Welsh blankets, or caffini to give them their proper name, date back to the Middle Ages.
14:31They're also known as tapestry because of their thick double-layered weave.
14:35Anne would adorn marriage beds, swaddle babies and be passed down from generation to generation, just like Kerry's were.
14:43They look in lovely condition as well, you've looked after them.
14:47Kim, this one looks big as well.
14:49It is quite big.
14:51Everybody loves a blanket, everybody needs a blanket, and you couldn't get better ones than this.
14:57They are all handmade, they're all 100% wool, some have got their original labels in.
15:03I've heard of some really rare, really early blankets fetching six, seven hundred pounds.
15:09They would be very, very special ones.
15:12It's got to have the age, the rarity and the colours.
15:16Kerry's blankets are mid-century, so won't come on quite that much, but are highly sought after nonetheless.
15:23The blankets are fantastic, I really like those, and it would be nice to be able to sell a little
15:28bit of Wales down here in Devon.
15:30I think people are going to really like them.
15:33I've put prices on each of the blankets, and the total for the collection came to 1,200.
15:40Right.
15:41Did Lydia's shop just turn very chilly?
15:45Ooh, chuck me a blanket.
15:5420 miles away, as the gull flies, is the fishing town of Brixham.
15:59For 300 years, its distinctive cottages have been a beacon to weary trollermen.
16:03Now they welcome in the tourists, as 4.5 million pass through the Riviera each year.
16:12Laura and Amy have made their way here from Froome in Somerset to Bob's Antique Shop, hoping to sell some
16:18pieces of royal wedding cake left to them by their father.
16:21This is a good collection. Yeah.
16:24And, you know, tell me why you wanted to part with it.
16:27When our dad passed away, it was...
16:29Not much was left, you know, that we could cherish and keep hold of for myself, my sister and our
16:35daughter.
16:36So we're more of a memory type of family, we like to make memories.
16:41The fondest time for me growing up was our family holidays in Spain.
16:46My mum and dad are both quite silly and fun, so, you know, that's probably where we get it from,
16:50but it's like, you know, that's get three weeks with your fun parents kind of thing.
16:56But sadly, not all their memories of their father are quite as joyful.
16:59So the last few years in my dad's life were pretty tough.
17:03Yeah.
17:04He struggled with addiction and mental health problems.
17:06He wasn't the person we grew up with.
17:08Yeah.
17:08When he died, we'd already lost the man that he was, basically.
17:13We'd already grieved.
17:14Unfortunately, the last memories sort of overclouded sometimes, the beginning memories.
17:25So we were hoping to use the money that we get from this to take my daughter to Disneyland and
17:30make a memory to be for my dad.
17:32Present from Grandad.
17:33Yeah, exactly.
17:35Well, I've got to be honest, I'm fascinated by this and I love it and it would, you know, I
17:40would love, as a collector of royal memorabilia, I would love it at home.
17:45But, from your point of view, I think you would probably be better maybe take it into one of the
17:52antique dealers in Ashburton.
17:54And although we do love the royal family and I do like cake.
17:59Don't we all?
18:00I'm not going to make you an offer today.
18:02I must admit, it's the most expensive piece of cake I've seen.
18:06And smelly it?
18:08Yeah.
18:11If Amy and Laura had brought the cake in and said, this is a wedding cake made aboard the royal
18:19yacht, my eyes would open and I would say, yes, I'm interested in this.
18:24But I can't get too eclectic with my collection.
18:29So, I turned them down.
18:31But, yes, I was very tempted.
18:33Oh, just had a thought.
18:35Before you go, we're doing a royal yacht afternoon tea and we would love you to come.
18:41How would you like that?
18:42Oh, it sounds lovely.
18:43Amazing, yeah.
18:44You needn't bring cake.
18:46OK?
18:47Yeah, brilliant, thank you.
18:48Bye.
18:49I'll send you an invitation.
18:50Yeah.
18:54With the cakes safely back in their boxes, the sisters are taking the antiques trail half an hour inland.
19:04And in anticipation for Amy and Laura's return for high tea, Bob's checking his service is ship shape and Bristol
19:11fashion.
19:15This set is absolutely magnificent. It's beautiful.
19:20It's going to look fantastic with our Royal Yacht afternoon tea.
19:26The latest offering we've got in the chart room is the Royal Yacht Britannia Deluxe High Tea.
19:33This is going to be the pinnacle of our high teas.
19:36We wanted to do something that we could incorporate genuine antiques.
19:42So, this particular tea will be the tea that you might expect if you were royalty.
19:47And we will be pulling out all the stops, the opulence and splendour of early steamship travel and all our
19:54antiques coming together to create a special event for a special occasion.
20:04Over in Ashburton, Anne and Kerry are still unpacking their vast collection from Wales.
20:12I've got some willow pattern plates.
20:15Okay.
20:16They're Georgian.
20:17Yeah.
20:17They are Welsh pottery. I'm bringing all the Welsh things here today.
20:21Excellent. That's good.
20:21It's Dillwyn, China, from the Swansea Pottery.
20:26Fantastic. Oh, I'd love to see that. Yeah.
20:31They belonged to Anne's globetrotting great-great-grandparents, who took the plates with them to America in the 1830s, then
20:38brought them back again.
20:41Oh, yeah, they're lovely. They're in the traditional willow pattern.
20:45Oh, yes. Yes.
20:45Willow was so popular, often people mistake them for Chinese plates.
20:50That's right.
20:50But very much English, or Welsh in this case.
20:53Yes.
20:53And there was such an influence of Chinese sort of culture in 18th, 19th centuries, that then the British potteries
21:01started to make, copy the designs.
21:04They're in excellent condition.
21:06Anne had the plates valued a while ago, and has high hopes for a tidy sum.
21:11Fantastic as a set, it's not the most valuable thing in the world.
21:17Oh, dear.
21:18It might potentially hold more sort of almost sentimental family value to you with the sort of history behind it.
21:26I'd be offering you £80 for the set on those plates.
21:31I was offered £80 for a pair.
21:35Yeah.
21:36Do you think there's a better market potentially in Wales for the Swansea Pottery, maybe?
21:40I don't really know.
21:41It can be difficult sometimes to say to someone, actually, something's not worth a great deal of money.
21:47When you know to them, it means a lot.
21:51We deal with a lot of emotions, and you have got to be careful.
22:04Oh, wow. Look at all these antique shops there. So many.
22:08Hey.
22:09With Lydia navigating tricky offers in her shop, Laura and Amy are exploring the other end of the high street
22:16in the hopes of finding a buyer for their royal wedding cakes.
22:23This looks like a good one.
22:25Hi. Hi.
22:26How are you doing? I'm Laura.
22:27Oh, hi. Nice to meet you.
22:28Amy.
22:29Amy, nice to meet you.
22:30I'm Jordan.
22:30Hi. How are you doing?
22:31Jordan is one of the newest dealers in the Antiques Riviera.
22:35I've had the shop for a little over a year now.
22:39And in that year, it has grown and it has changed so much.
22:43It was a pet shop before.
22:44There was a slight, slight odour of treats, shall we say.
22:50And the neighbourhood dogs still walk past and try to pull their owners in.
22:55But today, it's the whiff of opportunity drawing Laura and Amy in.
23:02When you, like, first open the box...
23:04It's like a mist.
23:05It is, yeah.
23:07Yeah, like a funky old garage, I would say.
23:09Do you know what I mean?
23:10Yeah, yeah.
23:14The sisters' smelly slices of royal wedding cake are accompanied by programmes from the ceremonies,
23:19as well as precious photographs of their parents with step-grandfather Frank.
23:24We inherited them from my dad, who actually inherited them from his mum,
23:29and his step-dad was a yeoman guard for the Queen.
23:32Oh, wonderful.
23:32You can't get better provenance than that.
23:34Other than Charles walking in here and saying,
23:38I found this in the freezer.
23:41Oh, fantastic.
23:41So that's Frank there, with our mum and our dad.
23:45Yeah.
23:45Oh, wow.
23:46And then we've got an older one there.
23:48Frank there.
23:49I myself spent some time in the guards, so I...
23:52Oh, wow.
23:53Yeah.
23:54Well, I've met Charles, a bit too young to meet Diana.
23:58Yeah.
23:59Looking at Frank's rack of medals, he's been on quite a few campaigns.
24:03Yeah.
24:04He's had quite a long career in history there.
24:07Yeah.
24:07He's got Second World War campaign medals.
24:10Yeah.
24:10So being in the guards and having the campaign medals,
24:15he probably saw some really pivotal bits of history in the war,
24:19and you might be shocked to find he's probably a little bit of a war hero,
24:24not just a nutcracker as he would appear.
24:30The king's bodyguard of the Yeoman of the Guard, to give them their full title,
24:34began as the monarch's personal protection A-Team.
24:38The unit was created by Henry VII after the Battle of Bosworth in 1485,
24:42when the Tudor dynasty began.
24:45It's been running ever since, making it the oldest military corps in Britain.
24:52That's really amazing to find out, really, isn't it, for us?
24:54It is, yeah.
24:55Because we don't have known any of that.
24:56Yeah.
24:56This is kind of the history that we have for it, so to know more.
25:00Yeah.
25:00Yeah, it's really interesting.
25:01There's always a bigger picture to what's going on, yeah.
25:04You know, zooming out from a commercial point of view
25:07is probably an all right time to kind of sell and buy these sort of things.
25:11Yeah, OK.
25:11And I think to have the opportunity to own it,
25:13it is a privilege someone will pay for.
25:15Yeah.
25:17Erm...
25:17I feel a but coming.
25:20It's going to be a hard one for me to sell.
25:22There it is.
25:24I would try and sell them myself at 500 each.
25:27Yeah.
25:27So I would try and offer you 300 apiece.
25:31Whereas I would recommend put these out on the open market
25:34in a good auction house, strong reserve,
25:36and see what they do, you know?
25:38OK, great.
25:39Yeah.
25:40I think £900 for all three slices is a fair, strong offer for today
25:45as it's a very niche item.
25:47I have a connection with previously being a guardsman myself,
25:50but I've always got to remember this is a business at the end of the day
25:54and I'm doing this to make a profit.
25:56You know, if I can help someone along the way as part of that,
25:59it's always going to be a bonus.
26:01Fascinating to learn about Frank's medals
26:04because that's nothing that we knew about.
26:06Yeah.
26:06Not just the cakes, the history of Frank was amazing to learn.
26:09Yeah.
26:10So, I mean, it was quite interesting that Jordan made us an offer
26:12Yeah.
26:12like £300 each day.
26:14Yeah, and it wasn't a bad offer either, I wouldn't have said.
26:16Yeah.
26:16However, I think it was really helpful that he was honest
26:18and auction was our best way forward.
26:21Yeah.
26:21When an opportunity gets given to you to have a look at an item like this,
26:26even just to see it is always a pleasure
26:28and it's a piece of history you can put in your pocket.
26:32Maybe not a pocket actually, let's rephrase that.
26:41Little Slash
26:55The English Riviera with its 22 miles of beaches, warm seas and postcard perfect sea front
27:01have been a stalwart of the staycation packs
27:04since the Victorians invented the holiday.
27:08Set back from the russet sands of Paynton's seafront
27:11lies a slightly less picturesque warehouse.
27:14But don't judge this book by its cover.
27:17If anyone ever asks me what my job title is,
27:18I'm actually a treasure hunter.
27:21Dan runs NLB auctions in Paynton.
27:25It's just like I don't dig holes
27:26and look for the big red axe on the floor.
27:29Quite often the treasure's just heading in a drawer
27:31in a house somewhere.
27:33Dan and his team specialise in contemporary treasures
27:35and are often called upon to unearth the valuable
27:38in-house clearances.
27:41We've recently just sold a first edition,
27:45first impression Harry Potter book
27:46that basically came out of someone's bin.
27:49We found it in a job and that was like £22,000
27:52that we basically extracted out of the bin
27:55before we left the job.
27:57Here we are. Auctions.
27:59Yeah.
27:59I'm excited to get to see you.
28:01Yeah, yeah.
28:06Hello there, you all right?
28:07Hi.
28:08Hi, how you doing?
28:09How you doing?
28:09Daniel, how can I help?
28:10Amy and Laura are hoping Dan's unconventional methods
28:13might be just what they need
28:15to sell their royal wedding cakes.
28:17Did you try any?
28:18No.
28:20That's the first thing.
28:22They do smell a little funky.
28:24Yeah.
28:25Maybe a little too unconventional, Dan.
28:28These are the wedding programmes.
28:29Oh, the programmes.
28:31Yeah.
28:31So they come with the wedding programmes themselves.
28:34Yeah, this is like the hymn book and the song book
28:36for while you're in the church.
28:38Yeah.
28:38And this one is the order of events for the day.
28:41Did he attend all of the weddings?
28:43I'd imagine he would have done and Frank,
28:46because, yeah, he was the bodyguard around these times.
28:49But my mum did say they were told that if you do anything,
28:54Frank will even kill his own family to save the Queen.
28:56It's like there is no second question about it.
29:00Yeah, yeah, his job is to protect the royal family.
29:03Friend, family or foe.
29:04Yeah, yeah.
29:05Frank is going to get you.
29:06Yeah.
29:07The Yeoman Guard was created to be an impenetrable force
29:10protecting the monarchy,
29:11but Dan's keen to break down some of the mystery
29:14around our star soldier.
29:17Let's find out something about Frank.
29:18Yeah, yeah, definitely.
29:19Let's see if we can find out why he's this guy.
29:21Let's do to Prince Philip.
29:24Digging into the history surrounding the items
29:26helps Dan check the facts and confirm their provenance.
29:29A strong backstory could really help market
29:31these quirky slices of royal memorabilia.
29:35So, I'm hoping that this gentleman was Frank Pickford?
29:39Yeah.
29:40Yeah?
29:40Wow.
29:42Well, Frank Pickford is actually introducing
29:44a gentleman called Staff Sergeant Artie Millmore.
29:47This is 1953.
29:49And, yeah, he's actually personally introducing him
29:51to Prince Philip.
29:52But, yeah, he must have been a gentleman
29:54of some serious importance,
29:55because he's within, like, say, three feet
29:59of the Duke of Edinburgh.
30:00That's amazing.
30:00Yeah.
30:01And, well, he's introducing people to him.
30:03Yeah.
30:04That's pretty exciting.
30:05Yeah, really exciting.
30:06I think having the provenance with the cakes,
30:09the photographs, I think the story,
30:13will give them traction.
30:14In the auction house,
30:16so those that are really into royal heritage
30:20and royal collectibles
30:21will be interested that they've come from
30:23from a figure that was so close to the royal family.
30:26So it will help in terms of drawing attention.
30:30I'm not sure if it will affect the value massively,
30:32but it's still interesting nevertheless.
30:39Antique shops come in all shapes and sizes
30:41on the Riviera,
30:41where there's a place to sell every type of treasure.
30:48In Ashburton,
30:49even more heirlooms have appeared
30:51from the boot of Anne's car.
30:53Might this lead to an offer
30:54she and daughter Kerry are happy with?
30:56Let's have a look.
30:57I've got some hatch pins, silver hatch pins.
30:59Oh, excellent.
31:01Oh, wow.
31:02Quite a collection.
31:03I love the pin cushion as well.
31:06Great.
31:07Let's have a look.
31:10Hat pins are so nice.
31:13They're from such a different era, aren't they?
31:15I couldn't imagine sort of wearing them now,
31:18but they were really commonplace.
31:20They were nice to collect
31:21because they don't take a lot of room up in the house.
31:24Yeah.
31:25Oh, that's great.
31:26There's a pig.
31:26It's my favourite.
31:27You can see a hallmark on them as well.
31:29I'm fairly sure that he's nine carats.
31:31Yes.
31:31But he's got little diamond eyes.
31:33Oh, fantastic.
31:34See, that's going to appeal to a lot of people,
31:36hat pin collectors,
31:37but also there's lots of people
31:40who collect animals and pigs.
31:41Yeah.
31:42So that's super.
31:44That's a gold.
31:45Another little gold one.
31:46Yeah.
31:47A lob on the top.
31:49Really nice collection.
31:52So far, Anne and Kerry have offered blankets,
31:54plates and antique hat pins,
31:56but there's more to come.
31:58Have we gone through everything in the bags?
32:01Anything left?
32:01No, I've got...
32:02Oh, go on.
32:03Never ended.
32:04Excellent.
32:05It's like a magician's hat.
32:08And Anne is conjuring quite the horde,
32:11from boating and riding hats
32:13to a clock,
32:15cranberry glassware
32:16and silver miniatures.
32:18There's certainly lots of pieces
32:20that I'm interested in buying,
32:21so it just comes down to price on things now.
32:24Lydia has already offered £1,200
32:27for Kerry's Welsh blankets
32:29and is now totting up Anne's vast collection.
32:32So the silver,
32:34that little group there,
32:35I priced up at £200.
32:36OK.
32:37All of the hat pins
32:38and the little pin cushion
32:40came out at...
32:44..270.
32:45Then we've got a couple of other bits.
32:47I came to £1,960.
32:49That's for everything.
32:51Yes.
32:51The plates then were...
32:53Plates.
32:54..80.
32:54Yes.
32:54That's the best you can do on the plates.
32:57I knew she was going to haggle.
32:58Got £1,960.
33:00Well, look,
33:01how about if I round it up
33:02to around £2,000?
33:04Yes.
33:05Nice and easy to remember.
33:07There are, of course,
33:07other shops in Ashburton,
33:09lots of dealers here
33:10on the sort of antiques trail.
33:12If you want to have a chat
33:13with any of them,
33:13you're very welcome to.
33:15I'd love you to come back.
33:16I'd love to buy it all.
33:17But, yeah,
33:18take your time and have a think.
33:21I was quite happy
33:22to offer Kerry and Anne
33:24a price for the whole lot.
33:26There are some bits in there
33:27that I am more keen on than others.
33:31Particularly,
33:32I'd like to get the blankets
33:33and some of the hat pins.
33:36But it's nice to be able
33:37to give them the option
33:38to be able to sell everything together.
33:40Really nice and easy.
33:41I like hat pins, though.
33:42Didn't the suffragettes
33:43use them as weapons?
33:44Yes, they did.
33:45I love that.
33:46They're so sharp, aren't they?
33:47You can see.
33:48Good old suffragettes.
33:49Yeah.
33:50Amazing.
33:52Good old suffragettes indeed.
33:54Emmeline Pankhurst
33:55once had to claim sanctuary
33:56in a Riviera sweet shop
33:58whilst fleeing
33:59an angry anti-suffrage mob.
34:01A hat pin or two
34:02would have been quite handy.
34:11At Dan's auction house
34:12in Paynton,
34:14Amy and Laura
34:14are discovering more
34:15about their step-grandfather,
34:17Frank.
34:18Here you go.
34:19Would you like another photo of him?
34:21Yeah.
34:21Here you go.
34:24He enlisted at 18 years old,
34:25so he'd been in World War II
34:26when he was 20...
34:2923, 24,
34:3025 years,
34:31discharged in 1957
34:32from the Coldstream Guards
34:34who joined the Bodyguard.
34:36Five years later,
34:37he couldn't keep himself away,
34:38could he?
34:39He did nearly 50 years,
34:4049 years of service.
34:41So the information
34:42we're finding out here,
34:43could this potentially
34:44increase the price of the cake?
34:46Possibly.
34:47The more history
34:47we can get on Frank,
34:50the better the story becomes.
34:52Got his service number as well.
34:53And it's interesting
34:54that actually his history
34:57helps sell the cake
34:58because we just thought,
34:59oh, we've got this cake,
35:00that'll be it.
35:01Valuing these unique slices
35:03of history can be tricky
35:04because no two stories
35:05are the same.
35:07But tech-savvy Dan's
35:08not just any old expert.
35:10He's tapping into
35:11a vast digital arsenal.
35:13This here is 450 auction houses
35:16in the UK.
35:18And this is 10 years of data
35:20and I've just literally
35:21ordered it by highest price.
35:22Yeah, yeah.
35:23And highest is 380,
35:24340, 340.
35:25I think for the Diana cake,
35:27250 to 400 quid
35:29is pretty reasonable.
35:29Yeah.
35:30And you probably don't want
35:31to see the price
35:31of the Andrew one,
35:32but I'll show you anyway.
35:33Yeah.
35:33Prince Andrew's cake
35:34makes 40 quid.
35:35Oh, wow.
35:37That doesn't surprise me, though.
35:39Sorry, well,
35:39we'll eat that one.
35:41Yeah, yeah.
35:43We'll eat the Andrew cake.
35:45There's better news
35:46for the rest of the collection
35:47thanks to the memorabilia
35:48Frank saved
35:49alongside the slices.
35:51And this is where
35:52you may have some benefit
35:54because you've got programmes.
35:55Yeah.
35:55You've got history.
35:56Yeah.
35:57That's where prices
35:58start to change really,
35:59like, potentially drastically.
36:00Yeah.
36:01So if I look at these,
36:03there you go,
36:03there's 1,300 quid.
36:04Maybe.
36:04It's a bit of Charles
36:05and Diana cake there.
36:06There's Buckingham Palace
36:07letters in there.
36:08OK, so how much do you think
36:09they'd go as an item then?
36:10I think as a group
36:12with the history,
36:13if we split up
36:14into a couple of lots,
36:15you're going to be looking
36:15somewhere between
36:16£600 and £800.
36:17OK.
36:18I mean, we didn't really
36:19have any idea, did we?
36:21Yeah.
36:21When we've come into this,
36:22we have no expectations
36:23of how little,
36:24how much we could get.
36:26I mean, if you want
36:26to have a think about it,
36:27then we can, you know,
36:28kind of get from there.
36:29Yeah.
36:29Awesome.
36:31If they decide to take
36:33the Royal Wedding Cakes
36:33to auction,
36:34the sisters will have
36:35to factor in selling fees
36:36of up to 9.5%.
36:39It's risk of the unknown
36:41versus the immediate reward
36:42of dealer Jordan's
36:43earlier offer.
36:46I'm feeling like auction
36:47is our best option
36:49because although Jordan
36:50offered us £900...
36:52Yeah.
36:53..and this is maybe
36:55starting slightly lower,
36:56we've got more chance
36:58that it possibly could
36:59go a bit higher,
36:59even including the fees
37:01that he's going to allow.
37:03Yeah, yeah, I think
37:03we take the risk.
37:04Yeah.
37:05Because it's kind of,
37:05it's not that far apart
37:06in terms of a lower end.
37:08Yeah.
37:09And we might get more.
37:10Yeah.
37:11OK, so the decision
37:12made that we're going
37:12to go to auction.
37:13Yeah.
37:14It's a bold move,
37:15turning down a guaranteed
37:16£900 in the pocket,
37:18but they do say
37:19fortune favours the brave.
37:21Let's go.
37:40It's mid-summer on the Riviera,
37:42where tourists flock
37:43in search of antique treasures.
37:47Oh, this is unique.
37:50Different kind of shop
37:51to the other, isn't it?
37:52Oh, no, mate.
37:54And where,
37:54whether they're buying
37:55or selling,
37:56they're sure of a warm welcome
37:57and a fresh scone.
37:59Or two.
38:02Oh, this is the exciting bit.
38:04I haven't seen it laid out yet.
38:07In Brixham,
38:09dealer slash cafe owner Bob
38:10is planning his latest venture.
38:13The Royal Yacht Britannia
38:15afternoon tea,
38:16this will be an opportunity
38:17for passengers,
38:20customers,
38:21to join us
38:22and to experience
38:25what life was like
38:27for the Royal Family
38:28during an afternoon tea
38:30on board the Royal Yacht.
38:32He's press-ganged waitress Sue
38:34into helping him plan
38:35the perfect table setting.
38:37OK, so we've got,
38:38we'll start with the,
38:40these are Ainslie Georgian Cobalt
38:43and these are acid gold.
38:47It's sort of almost,
38:48almost a blue.
38:50Oh, in certain light,
38:52it's blue.
38:52Yeah.
38:53Oh, yeah.
38:55But it's very regal.
38:57There you go.
38:58Well, when I joined the Navy in 1971,
39:04I then realised quickly
39:06that I really wanted to see the world
39:08and I wanted to travel on the big ships
39:11and I was fortunate enough
39:12to get a job working on board the QE2.
39:15And I immediately started to work
39:17in the first class area.
39:20The celebrities
39:21and the politicians
39:22and the opulence
39:24and the splendour
39:25and all of the lovely food
39:28and it was just something
39:31that was purely for the elite
39:33at the time.
39:34So, Bob's recreating the experience
39:36for us mere commoners
39:37with genuine antique tableware.
39:39Well, that looks perfect so far.
39:41And a touch of silver screen glamour.
39:44Right, what goes out next?
39:46Well, this is from the set
39:48of Death on the Nile.
39:51We bought this from Pinewood Studios.
39:53And isn't the crew at set the same?
39:55Yep.
39:56Last used by Poirot himself.
39:59There you go.
40:00That's more or less
40:01how it's going to look on the day.
40:03So, does it make you feel royal?
40:04Do you feel like a princess?
40:06Oh, no, I feel like the queen.
40:07As well you should.
40:11Over in Ashburton,
40:12our princesses of Wales,
40:13Anne and Kerry,
40:14are hoping to sell
40:15their car boot full of heirlooms.
40:18Didn't Grandma have a coffee set
40:19like that one?
40:20She did have got it
40:21in the kitchen, in the cupboard.
40:22They want to raise
40:23as much money as they can
40:24towards an £8,000
40:26cruise of a lifetime.
40:27Oh, hello there.
40:28You all right?
40:29Yes, I'm cute.
40:30We're just having a look.
40:31Yeah, you're very welcome.
40:32It's very different
40:33and usual shop.
40:35A lot of different pieces here.
40:36Well, it's a real antique shop.
40:37It is, isn't it?
40:38It looks it.
40:40I like the name.
40:41Den of Antiquity.
40:42Yes.
40:42Yeah, a guy came in once
40:43and said it's a right
40:44den of iniquity.
40:45Yeah, exactly.
40:46And I said to him,
40:47I said, come in
40:47and I'll explain the shop to you.
40:49And afterwards he said,
40:50I'm wrong,
40:51it's a den of antiquity.
40:52It's a good name.
40:54Yeah.
40:55Well, I suppose it's defined
40:57by what other people
40:58think of it.
40:59I mean,
41:00it's a very impactful shop.
41:02I mean,
41:02people come in
41:03and if you get it,
41:05you get it.
41:06It's like Aladdin's cave.
41:09Good gracious me.
41:10I don't know where to look.
41:12I'd quite like to pass away
41:14in the shop really
41:15and someone lock the door
41:17and come back
41:18in a thousand years
41:18and think,
41:19my God,
41:19who was this Pharaoh
41:20surrounded by his grave goods?
41:22Well, Pharaoh,
41:24Anne's got a few offerings
41:25for you
41:25in the back of her car.
41:27Ah,
41:28how fantastic.
41:30It's a collection
41:30of outpins.
41:32They're just fashiony
41:34outpins,
41:35but these are
41:38silver ones.
41:39Let's have a look.
41:40Anne's had an offer
41:41on these from Lydia
41:42but she's hoping
41:43she might get
41:43a better price with Tom.
41:45Now, that's nice, isn't it?
41:47Have you ever seen
41:47another one of those for sale?
41:48I've never seen
41:49that one before.
41:51That one I've seen,
41:52but the Welsh hat
41:53is fantastic.
41:54Is that one marked,
41:55you know?
41:56Yeah, it's marked.
41:57So, Charles Horner
41:58produced a lot of stuff,
42:00Yorkshireman,
42:01Halifax,
42:02and opened his business
42:051860s, I think.
42:06Gosh.
42:08At the turn
42:09of the 19th century,
42:11when hair was big
42:11and hatpins
42:12were even bigger business,
42:14Charles Horner
42:14in Halifax
42:15cornered the market.
42:17Thanks to the
42:17Industrial Revolution,
42:19their new factory
42:20was able to
42:20mass-produce hatpins
42:22to meet demand.
42:24So, they're my kind
42:25of thing.
42:26I particularly like
42:27the Welsh hat.
42:27Yeah.
42:28I will offer
42:29£350 for those.
42:31I don't know
42:31how that sits with the...
42:32It sits quite well
42:34with me.
42:34So, that sit well?
42:34It does, yeah.
42:36The blankets,
42:37plates and other
42:38household goods
42:39don't hold any interest
42:40for Tom,
42:41but just as he's
42:42about to close the boot...
42:43What have we got in here?
42:44And silver miniatures
42:46catch his eye.
42:47The best things there
42:48for me are these.
42:49Little frames.
42:50Little frames.
42:50They're so small,
42:51aren't they?
42:52Very small.
42:53It's original photographs.
42:54They're either 1911
42:56for the coronation
42:57or there was a big
42:58celebration in 1935,
43:00which I think was
43:01the silver jubilee.
43:02So, they look a bit
43:03more 1935,
43:04but they're coronation.
43:06Yeah.
43:07But those are really sweet
43:08and they would appeal
43:09to Doll's House
43:11Collector
43:11or just a miniature
43:12silver collector.
43:14So, looking at these bits,
43:16I'm very happy
43:17to pay £2.20 for that.
43:18Right, yes.
43:19Okay, and I'm very happy
43:20to pay...
43:20What did I say on those?
43:21£3.50.
43:22£3.50.
43:22So, £2.20 and £3.50
43:24is £5.70.
43:25So, if you'd like £5.70
43:27for them,
43:28I think that's a good
43:29both ways.
43:29Yes, I do.
43:30I think it's a good price.
43:30Yeah, I'm willing to...
43:32Are you?
43:32You're happy with that.
43:33I'm happy with that.
43:34Yeah, I am.
43:34All right.
43:35Thank you very much.
43:35It's been a pleasure
43:36to see all those things.
43:37And you've been very kind
43:38and informative.
43:39Well, the silver,
43:40I buy and sell a lot of silver
43:42and I can always fit
43:43some more in.
43:44I offered them
43:45a very good price
43:46for the silver
43:46because I tell you why,
43:48because they were nice,
43:48genuine, honest people
43:49and I really liked them.
43:51He was a really nice
43:52gentleman, wasn't he?
43:53Yeah, I thought he was...
43:55Very informative.
43:56Lovely shop.
43:56I loved it in there.
43:58And he gave me a good price
43:59and I was happy with that.
44:00I think they've gone
44:01to a good home.
44:04Now, all that's left for them
44:05is to return to Lydia's
44:06with their remaining items.
44:08But as the deal
44:09was for a bundle,
44:10will Lydia consider
44:11buying what's left
44:12after Tom's had his pick?
44:14Hi, Lydia.
44:15Hi, ladies.
44:16Hi.
44:17How are you?
44:18All right, thank you.
44:19Good, good.
44:20How's your day been?
44:22Good.
44:23We've had a lovely day.
44:26It's lovely to look
44:26around Ashburton.
44:28Did you make a decision?
44:29Yes.
44:30We've had a chat.
44:31We've made a decision.
44:32Yeah.
44:33I'd like to take your offer up
44:35with a blanket
44:36if that's OK with you.
44:37Yeah, I'm really pleased.
44:38Thrilled.
44:39I really like those.
44:40I think I might actually
44:41have one of them at home.
44:42Oh, that'd be fantastic.
44:44Going to a good home.
44:45Yeah, absolutely.
44:45Lovely, thank you.
44:46Yeah.
44:47That was the easy bit.
44:49Kerry sold her
44:49seven watch blankets
44:50for £1,200.
44:52Now, Anne needs to convince Lydia
44:54her assortment of heirlooms
44:56is worth buying
44:56without the silver
44:58as a sweetener.
44:59I'm sorry to say,
45:00I did have a better offer
45:02on the silver.
45:02OK.
45:03So I've taken that,
45:04but I'm prepared
45:05to sell the rest
45:05and I've got the little gold pin
45:07that you wanted.
45:08Oh, super.
45:08Clever move.
45:09My favourite, yeah.
45:10Yeah, I knew that.
45:11Thank you very much.
45:12And that's how you
45:13seal yourself a deal
45:14and sold the rest
45:15of the items to Lydia
45:16for £370.
45:19You must both be pleased.
45:20Be very pleased.
45:21Good.
45:22We're a step nearer
45:23to our holiday.
45:24Absolutely, yeah.
45:25You can start booking
45:26that now, can't you?
45:27I hope so.
45:29Anne and Kerry
45:30are heading back to Wales
45:31with an empty boot
45:32and a full purse.
45:33They've raised a total
45:34of £2,140
45:36towards their
45:37cruise of a lifetime.
45:47As the Riviera
45:48shuts up shop for the day,
45:50Amy and Laura's box
45:51full of royal wedding cakes
45:52are being safely tucked away
45:54by Dan
45:54ahead of their auction.
45:59But as the auction day dawns,
46:01I have the ladies
46:02in the room with me here
46:03that they belong to.
46:04Will the sisters
46:05regret gambling
46:06on the gavel?
46:07Princess Diana Kate Keir,
46:08I do have a bid with me.
46:11And will they be celebrating
46:13or drowning their sorrows
46:14at Bob's Royal High Tea?
46:17You are on the maiden voyage.
46:19Wow!
46:19Sounds exciting.
46:31I do have a bid for you.
46:32I do have a bid for you.
46:34I do have a bid for you.
46:42I do have a bid and for you.
46:43I do have a bid for you.
46:45I do have a bid for you.
46:46I do have a bid for you.
46:47I do have a bid for you.
46:48I do have a bid for you.
46:48I do have a bid for you.
46:49I do have a bid for you.
46:49I do have a bid for you.
46:49I do have a bid for you.
46:50I do have a bid for you.
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