Episode 5 Antiques Road Trip


Episode 5

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The nation's favourite antiques experts, £200 each and one big challenge.

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Testing, testing!

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Who can make the most money buying and selling antiques as they scour the UK?

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Well, actually 80. 75.

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The aim is trade up and hope each antique turns a profit,

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but it's not as easy as it sounds and there can only be one winner.

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Come on, let's go!

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So will it be the highway to success or the B road to bankruptcy?

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Job done. I'm now broke.

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This is the Antiques Road Trip.

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Our two antiques experts this week are Charles Hanson

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and Jonathan Pratt, acting captain. Aargh!

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Auctioneer Jonathan Pratt's first passion is for furniture.

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I'm in furniture mode now.

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I'm happy!

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But since doing the Road Trip, he's discovered a brand-new talent.

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Don't give up the day job just yet, Jonathan, eh?

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Charles Hanson has loved antiques ever since he was a boy, a couple of years ago,

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when his parents would take him round grand old country houses.

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Oh, and did I mention, he's from Derbyshire.

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The reason I like it, I'm a Derbyshire man.

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A proud Derbyshire man. I'm a Derbyshire man. Strong in the arm, bit thick in the head.

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Both experts started this week with £200.

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Like that.

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Charles did surprisingly well yesterday. His carved oak candle box made a staggering £50 profit.

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All done?

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It could be yours.

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That's very good. I'm very happy. Thank you.

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He starts today with a respectable £278.32.

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Jonathan's fortunes, however, were mixed as some of his items failed to do as well as he'd hoped.

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Any advance on £70? On the net at 70.

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-£70.

-He lost a tenner.

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Despite that, he still has a commanding lead with £379.23 to spend.

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That's over £100 more than his rival.

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As the competition between them intensifies,

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this is Charles' very last chance to catch up.

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This week's Road Trip started in Greyabbey, in Northern Ireland.

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Ended up in Cockermouth, in the North West.

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On today's show, our chaps continue their tour around the picturesque North West,

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starting in Blackpool and heading for auction in Cockermouth.

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Ah, Blackpool. It's the UK's all-time favourite seaside resort.

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# We're all going on a summer holiday

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# No more worries for me or you

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# For a week or two. #

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Ever since the mid-19th century, tourists have been flocking here en masse.

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Mill owners would close their factories for a week every year and Blackpool

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is where their employees would escape to.

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You want a good time?

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You want penny slots, illuminations? Look at them, JP.

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You've got these gorgeous mermaids here in bikini tops.

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What more do you want?

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Er, some sunshine perhaps?

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# To make our dreams come true-ooh-ooh

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# For me and you. #

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No, just try it. It's lovely. Go on.

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Go on, try a bit.

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See you later.

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As Jonathan finishes his candyfloss, Charles heads off to Lytham St Annes.

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The Laughing Donkey Family Bar.

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Where else would you find that?

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I've lost my candyfloss.

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I've lost my candyfloss.

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Hell fire.

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First stop, Diana Peters Antiques.

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Our chap's expert eye soon spots the work of a master ceramicist.

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Here we've got a most magnificent biscuit barrel.

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And if you want the best of a biscuit barrel to take your biscuits from,

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acquire this Moorcroft Florian Ware biscuit barrel.

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Sure takes the biscuit.

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William Moorcroft was renowned for the quality and artistry of his ceramic designs.

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Florian Ware was one of his first ranges.

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The design of it with these wonderful tube-lined scrolls, which are sinuous

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and free-flowing, is the epitome of Art Nouveau,

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which was developed in the late 1890s. And I love it.

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If it's in good condition, it's well worth the price. Over £1,000.

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Well, that's all very well, Charles, but it's out of your budget.

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How about something more modest, eh?

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-Isn't she lovely?

-Steady!

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# Isn't she lovely?

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# Isn't she wonderful? #

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Here we've got a most magnificent nude.

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Austrian bronze. She's in full length.

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Certainly dressed to impress

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by not wearing a lot.

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But in fact it's all to do with the great, fast-living,

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free spirit Jazz Age.

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She's also musical.

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PLAYS GENTLE TUNE

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So if you were a dancer in the 1920s...

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Isn't she nice?

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And £800 is the best price.

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Well, it's beyond me really.

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I shouldn't even be... You see, I'm wasting time.

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I'm wasting my time here.

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You know, I like antiques. I'm wasting my time and your time.

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Come on, Hanson! There is no time for this.

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Quite right, Carlos.

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Now, Jonathan takes time out from shopping to visit one of Blackpool's

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most stunning architectural and cultural achievements,

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the Grand Theatre.

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Hi. I've come out of the rain.

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-Hello.

-Jonathan Pratt. Hi. Nice to meet you.

-Hi. I'm David Fletcher.

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-Welcome to the Grand. Would you like to come through?

-Brilliant. Yes.

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Tour guide David Fletcher has been working here for 28 years.

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Blackpool has always been Britain's biggest show town after London's West End

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and the Grand was built to satisfy the late 19th-century demand for live entertainment, for spectacular,

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extravagant performances, which would wow any audience.

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Many of the best-known names in British theatre...

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Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh, John Gielgud, Prunella Scales... have all played here.

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Oh, my word.

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We're now in the auditorium.

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If you want to just come here where we can see everything from.

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The theatre was actually built by Frank Matcham.

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It opened on the 23rd July, 1894.

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Frank Matcham was Britain's most prolific theatre architect.

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He designed over 150 theatres,

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including London's Palladium and Coliseum.

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The Grand is one of his most impressive.

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He actually sat in that box there on the opening night, which is 116 years ago on the 23rd July.

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Oh, my word. Well presumably then this is a cast-iron structure?

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It is. Notice there are no pillars supporting the balconies.

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This is Victorian engineering on, I'd say, a grand scale,

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but on a small scale, but producing something extremely grand.

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This was a very large theatre at the time it was built.

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And no trip to the theatre is complete without a visit

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to the uppermost tier, also called the gods.

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Do you know why it's called the gods? As with most things in theatre, it originates in Ancient Greece.

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-Yes.

-When they had a play in Ancient Greece,

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they would have representations of the mortals and the gods, because that's how their lives were ruled.

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The persons playing the part of the gods would be suspended above everybody else.

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They had a wooden tower, a long pole and a rope and, literally, they would be hanging on the end of this rope.

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Not by the neck, but by their waist.

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-If you were up at the back of the amphitheatre, the highest point, you were up with the gods.

-OK.

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And that became corrupted over the years as "up in the gods".

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It's also the best place to admire the ornate baroque plasterwork.

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And yet another example of Victorian ingenuity.

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-The latticework around the chandeliers is part of the ventilation system.

-OK, so...

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Pressure pumped in down below. Body heat made it rise.

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It used to go up, settle out at the top there.

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The Victorians worked out everything.

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You don't need all these electrical...

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When we had it restored, they sucked two tonnes of dust out from up there.

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Cor! Just under 40 years ago, the efforts of the local community

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saved the theatre from the brink of demolition.

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And that's good news for us.

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Their visit to Blackpool now over,

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both our chaps head north to Morecambe.

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# Bring me sunshine

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# In your smile... #

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Like its neighbour, Morecambe is also a thriving seaside resort.

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Its most famous son is Eric, of Morecambe and Wise fame,

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who took his stage name from his hometown.

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# Bring me fun, bring me sunshine Bring me love! #

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Our boys are visiting Morecambe Antiques Centre and luckily it's big enough for both of them.

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But will it bring any sunshine in their lives?

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All the best.

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Good luck, Charlie. Happy shopping.

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-Watch your patch, OK? Cos I'll be on it.

-Yeah, right!

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-Very shortly.

-Ah, I'll go this way.

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This is my area, OK? This is my area.

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JP, come nowhere near.

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If you want a monumental, masculine specimen

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to grace your heavy,

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19th-century, late Victorian mantelpiece buy this.

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Look at it.

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It's architectural. The Arabic numerals.

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Carrying handles, too, because the weight of this clock...

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SNAPPING

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The handle's come off.

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It's so heavy the handle's come off.

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So now I ought to really own up, right?

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I'd better own up to it. Great(!)

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There goes my great afternoon so far.

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Charles, you've broken it!

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Let's see what Jonathan's up to, quick!

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That is, presumably, reproduction.

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You've got a nice shape which looks very, very Art Nouveau.

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It's basically an Art Nouveau case that's been repainted.

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It's not asking for a lot of money, £29.

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But in good order with the original inlay, you know,

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it would be sort of £40 at auction or something.

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Luckily for Charles, the sympathetic shop owner has let him off about the clock

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and he's trying desperately not to break anything else.

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This I like very much. It's a very nice, twin-handled bonbon dish.

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It's silver-plated, beautifully pierced.

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It's WMF, German Art Nouveau.

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WMF stands for Wurttemberg's Metal Goods Factory.

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Based in southern Germany, they were the world's largest producer

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and exporter of metalware and this is a snip at just £10.

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Surely it's worth between 20 and 30 on a good day.

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So we'll wait and see with that.

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As Charles deliberates, Jonathan spots something for the suave man about town.

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That's rather sweet.

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It's a coromandel dressing box.

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Coromandel is a valuable hardwood from India, Sri Lanka and South-East Asia.

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They're sort of multi-functional pieces of furniture for carrying around

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when you're going off with your staff somewhere.

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-It's just this chap here.

-Right.

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I'll just have a quick peek in one of these. There you go.

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All silver covers. It's Victorian.

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A lovely fitted case.

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With £379.23 left to spend, can Jonathan afford it?

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-Oh, yeah.

-Right.

-Right.

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-I've had a word with the vendor. She had £500 on it.

-She "had"?

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-She has. That's what she's got and that's what she wants for it.

-£500?

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Blimey. I haven't got that sort of money.

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But with £100 less to spend, Charles is being rather more modest with the items that he's looking at.

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What we have here

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is a very nice Anglo-Indian,

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colonial chair.

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It's magnificent. Think of the carving of this.

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Probably done at the time of the Raj, the 1880s, 1890s.

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It could be mine for £60.

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And the bonbon dish?

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Jo...

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I'll buy them both.

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If I said 50 for the chair and seven for the bonbon basket?

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I can't. No, no.

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Well, I'll pay £60, cos I think it has mileage.

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So 60 for the chair,

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-seven for the bonbon dish?

-Yeah, done.

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-Thank you very much.

-I'm very happy, Jo.

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-That's good.

-Thanks ever so much. Really, really good.

-Thanks.

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This could be Hanson's crowning glory. This could be my success.

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Seat comes off. Didn't realise that.

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It doesn't matter.

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Look at these legs. They're elephants.

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Again, a bit loose, but it doesn't matter.

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I'm missing an ear here as well.

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Doesn't matter. I'm missing one here as well. Doesn't matter.

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It's a really, really good chair.

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Er, shouldn't you look before you buy?

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From India to a country that's rather closer to home.

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That buckle there. Quite a nice, straightforward shape. Probably quite wearable.

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The question I'm asking myself, "Is it silver?"

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The reason I ask it is the decoration is this sort of black, chequer pattern.

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It's called "niello". It's a pattern which they use. Kind of a Russian influence.

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Niello" comes from the Latin for "blackened".

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It's a technique in which a mix of materials,

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like copper, lead and sulphur, are fused, usually on to a silver base.

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This buckle costs a very reasonable £18.

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SIGHS

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£12 or £13?

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-Leave it with me.

-OK.

-I'll see what I can do.

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Cheers. Thanks very much.

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Last of the big spenders, eh?

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You said it, Jonathan.

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Right. Had a word. Yes, he's happy with £13.

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£13. OK. Well, I'll take that then. Thanks very much.

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But Charles, who's not satisfied with just two purchases,

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is on a mission to spend, spend, spend!

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I've just been told that, literally, over here in number 27

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is a guy called John who lives here and has a house full of antiques.

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-Hello. Is it John?

-It is.

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-John, good to see you. May I come in? It's Charles.

-Yeah. Come through.

-Good to see you. Fine.

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Wow-ee, John, I can't believe it. Your house is awash with antiques.

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And, yes, this is literally John's house.

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Absolutely everything is for sale, so he tries

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not to get too attached to his furniture, because he never knows

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when someone's going to come around and buy it.

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I love the lady over here as well.

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-That one is a lot more.

-I love your lady.

-A lot more money.

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-She is just absolutely adorable.

-She's fabulous.

-She is a statement.

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To wake up to her and come downstairs and see her.

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-Yes, I have embraced her a few times.

-I can imagine.

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She's a great-looking lady.

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Gosh! And she could be yours for 650!

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Pounds, that is.

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From one old bird though to another.

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She is obviously the epitome of a fine Art Deco lady. She really is beautiful.

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Has a lovely figure, doesn't she?

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-Yes.

-Hour-glass figure, I think is what you call it.

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You seem to have a bit of an eye for the ladies today, Charles.

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# You're once

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# Twice

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# Three times a lady... #

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I would let you have that for £50 as a gift.

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Do you think, John, she's completely period?

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Just the actual patination

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and gilding on her extremities

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is all ever so clean and all so uniform.

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What I'm doing now is, I'm just putting my tooth, resting my tooth...

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Middle tooth... I'm not sure which one yet.

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But just by doing this

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I can now tell that it's very soft to touch. It's not cold.

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It's not chunky. It's not clinky.

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That's plastic. So again, that could be Bakelite.

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Bakelite was an early plastic used extensively throughout the 1920s and 1930s.

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But even if the base is original, the figure might be later.

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I'd like to buy it still because it's decorative.

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I do like the female form.

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I think she's stylish.

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I think she's evocative and you might even say,

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"Charles, well, let's go into together at £25."

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-But you tell me.

-No. I'll do you £30.

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And, John, do you know what?

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He's going to change his mind!

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It might be the biggest mistake I've made so far, but I think she's stylish enough...

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I think she's attractive enough, and I think her decorative appeal might outweigh any concerns over age.

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John, I'll buy it for 30.

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You're a great sport and I think that has some mileage.

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# I love you... #

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For our two chaps, there's just one more day shopping before the final auction.

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Let's hope they sleep well, eh?

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It's another fine day

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and both Charles and Jonathan are in high spirits.

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Today, I am happy. I am confident.

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We're on to apparently one of the biggest antique centres

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in the North.

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So far, Jonathan has spent a trifling £13 on the niello silver buckle.

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So he's left with the commanding sum of £366.23 to shop with.

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Charles however has been rather more profligate. Surprise, surprise.

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And has spent the grand total of £97 on three items... A bonbon dish,

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a carved Anglo-India chair...

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This could be Hanson's crowning glory.

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Plus a bronzed Art Deco figure.

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He's left with a respectable £181.32.

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Perfect.

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Today, our boys are leaving Morecambe

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and heading inland to Lancaster.

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They've just found out that the auction they're buying for

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is a general household sale. Great.

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And Jonathan spots something that might be just the ticket.

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This looks like a piece of G-plan or Ercol or something.

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"Ercol light elm coffee table, £75."

0:19:400:19:43

But the thing is, that's a kind of retro, vintage style,

0:19:430:19:47

which I think is possibly fashionable.

0:19:470:19:49

Ercol became a household name in post-war Britain.

0:19:490:19:52

It moved away from the heavy, ornate, pre-war styles towards a new, clean-lined, simple elegance.

0:19:520:20:00

This is sort of what you call speculative. This could come and bite me.

0:20:000:20:03

Time to negotiate with dealer Alan Blackburn.

0:20:030:20:06

Out of my comfort zone with something like Ercol, but...

0:20:060:20:09

-Yeah, it is.

-It's clean and it's modern and...

0:20:090:20:13

It's what people want.

0:20:130:20:14

Look, it's got £75 on it.

0:20:140:20:17

Yeah. We could do better than that.

0:20:170:20:19

Would you do as good as...?

0:20:190:20:22

Crikey, I mean, £40?

0:20:220:20:24

-I think you're pushing it, but 50 I think we could do.

-45?

0:20:240:20:28

Go on. Let's do 45.

0:20:280:20:30

OK. Go on. Let's go for it.

0:20:320:20:34

As it's the final day before the auction, Charles isn't wasting time either.

0:20:360:20:42

What I like here is a nice pair of weighing scales.

0:20:420:20:47

Although the scales are based on a Victorian design,

0:20:470:20:50

they're actually brand Harry Spankers, which means they're new.

0:20:500:20:54

These are gilt metal on the cast-iron stands.

0:20:560:21:00

They were £22. They're now £16.

0:21:000:21:01

And I spoke to Alan...

0:21:010:21:04

..and he informed me I could have them for £5.

0:21:050:21:08

It's not my taste, not my style, but I feel I'm buying for the auction we're going to.

0:21:080:21:14

Jonathan, however, is diverted by something rather less practical, rather more arty.

0:21:140:21:21

That to me is probably Chinese-made.

0:21:210:21:23

That's, at auction, a £30 violin, OK?

0:21:230:21:26

But...

0:21:270:21:29

bows are quite collectable and this one is stamped.

0:21:290:21:36

Although the violin is modern, the early 20th-century bow

0:21:370:21:41

is made by W Seifert, one of Germany's most respected bow makers.

0:21:410:21:47

What people don't realise is that there's a lot of work that goes into making a bow,

0:21:470:21:51

because they have to take a bent piece of wood and make it straight so that they get the tension on it.

0:21:510:21:56

-The case says 85.

-Yeah.

0:21:560:21:59

The violin says 65.

0:21:590:22:00

Right. Well, I think we can do a bit better than that. I would think £45.

0:22:000:22:06

-Can you do 40?

-Yeah, OK.

-Good.

0:22:060:22:09

OK. Well, done. Thank you very much.

0:22:090:22:11

And that's £40 for the case, the bow and the violin!

0:22:110:22:17

Job done. We'll see about that one.

0:22:170:22:20

Our boys aren't giving Alan an easy time of it today. Oh, no.

0:22:200:22:23

-This is the table and chairs here we discussed...

-I remember it.

0:22:230:22:27

Albeit briefly earlier. If I come round here.

0:22:270:22:29

Now I said to you, I'm going to a very...

0:22:290:22:34

-Have a seat, Alan.

-Yeah, why not?

0:22:340:22:36

I'm going to a household general sale.

0:22:360:22:39

This might be my last buy following the scales.

0:22:390:22:41

Although the table is 17th century in style, it's a modern 20th-century copy.

0:22:430:22:49

Compared to yesterday, I've done a U-turn.

0:22:490:22:52

I've gone from buying antiques to getting a bit desperate

0:22:520:22:55

and saying, "Alan, I'll offer you £60 for the whole lot."

0:22:550:22:58

Charles, go and make a profit.

0:22:580:23:01

-Really?

-Really.

-Alan, thanks ever so much. I'll take it then.

0:23:010:23:04

You certainly seem to have your business head on today, Charles.

0:23:040:23:09

Unlike Jonathan.

0:23:090:23:11

Basically, this is quite a pretty little thing, I suppose.

0:23:110:23:14

It's a cast-iron and enamel stick stand.

0:23:140:23:16

Made in France in the 1920s, it epitomises Art Deco style

0:23:160:23:22

and it could be yours for £120.

0:23:220:23:24

Ooh la la!

0:23:240:23:27

See, it's all umbrellas at the bottom?

0:23:270:23:29

Or, if it's French, parapluies. I like that.

0:23:290:23:32

It's kinda stylish, isn't it?

0:23:320:23:33

The last auction I did, I bought things that I really liked

0:23:330:23:38

and I ended up having my fingers burnt a little bit.

0:23:380:23:42

Yes, Jonathan, you did.

0:23:420:23:44

I think it's beautiful!

0:23:440:23:47

I paid £130.

0:23:470:23:50

-120.

-No, no, no!

0:23:500:23:52

If you could tell me your best price. I like it, but I'm prepared to walk away.

0:23:550:23:59

75.

0:23:590:24:02

Oh, I'm going to...

0:24:020:24:04

£75.

0:24:040:24:06

OK, thank you very much. All right. Oh, dear.

0:24:070:24:09

Charles has finished

0:24:110:24:12

his shopping and is heading north towards Kendal and Levens Hall.

0:24:120:24:17

It's one of the areas loveliest stately homes

0:24:170:24:20

and it's also known for its topiary.

0:24:200:24:24

What a pad.

0:24:240:24:26

Apparently, the finest Elizabethan home in Cumbria in existence.

0:24:260:24:32

Susie Bagot, wife of the current owner, Hal Bagot, is going to show him round.

0:24:360:24:40

Although the house is open to the public five days a week, it's still very much a family home.

0:24:400:24:47

The house was built by wealthy landowner James Bellingham

0:24:490:24:54

in the late 16th century.

0:24:540:24:56

This was his gent's residence that he was going to pour his all into.

0:24:560:25:00

It really is so ostentatious, isn't it?

0:25:000:25:02

This was a man who thought he was going somewhere.

0:25:020:25:04

It really is showing his wealth.

0:25:040:25:07

James Bellingham employed local craftsman to make the elaborate Italianate plasterwork

0:25:070:25:13

and carve the intricate oak panelling, in which he also features.

0:25:130:25:17

-But he must have had quite an ego, mustn't he, to have included himself in the carving?

-And that's...

0:25:190:25:24

And that is James Bellingham, with his little Elizabethan ruff and his short sort of, you know...

0:25:240:25:30

He looks quite spindly, doesn't he?

0:25:300:25:32

No need to be personal!

0:25:320:25:34

By the late 17th century, the house had passed to his great-grandson,

0:25:340:25:37

Alan Bellingham, who was a notorious gambler.

0:25:370:25:42

He squandered his wealth and ending up losing Levens Hall

0:25:420:25:46

to his kinsman Colonel James Grahme

0:25:460:25:48

in a game of cards,

0:25:480:25:51

one gamble that didn't pay off.

0:25:510:25:53

Colonel Grahme added extra wings to the Elizabethan house

0:25:530:25:57

and filled it with fine furniture and works of art.

0:25:570:26:00

James Grahme refers to his "golden parlour" in his correspondence.

0:26:000:26:03

-Oh, my goodness me.

-It's Spanish Cordoba leather.

0:26:030:26:06

Each square is said to be the skin of one goat.

0:26:060:26:10

Cor, must be a whole herd!

0:26:100:26:12

What an expensive form of wall hanging

0:26:120:26:15

and Cordoba, in Spain, was one of the main centres of production.

0:26:150:26:18

Skins were covered with silver leaf, which was then varnished

0:26:180:26:22

with a transparent yellow lacquer making the silver look like gold.

0:26:220:26:26

It's the finest collection of leather in Europe.

0:26:260:26:29

It would have been really vibrant, very alive

0:26:290:26:31

-and when the candlelight was flickering...

-Stunning.

-It was...

0:26:310:26:35

Stunning now. We always have candles when we eat in here.

0:26:350:26:37

What secrets have been discussed within these four walls?

0:26:370:26:42

-Just think of it.

-That's what I love.

-Smoke rising,

0:26:420:26:44

-candles flickering.

-Exactly.

-Secrets being whispered.

0:26:440:26:47

That's what I thrive on. Hands-on history, it's great to see.

0:26:470:26:50

While Charles sees the sights, Jonathan hits the shops in Kendal.

0:26:540:26:58

Hi, there.

0:26:580:26:59

At Sleddall Hall Antiques Centre something exotic catches his eye.

0:27:000:27:05

These are Japanese, probably early 20th-century, Cloisonne vases.

0:27:050:27:12

Cloisonne is a process of, basically, you have a copper base,

0:27:120:27:15

hence the copper red showing through.

0:27:150:27:18

And then they overlay wires and then fill all those in

0:27:180:27:23

with molten glass, basically, coloured glass

0:27:230:27:26

to make this pattern. Then they polish it.

0:27:260:27:28

But the thing is, cos it's glass, as soon as it breaks, it's gone.

0:27:280:27:31

Condition is absolutely so important for these.

0:27:310:27:35

Next up, Jonathan spots something that's in good condition,

0:27:350:27:39

an engraving.

0:27:390:27:40

Going to be 1890s or something.

0:27:400:27:42

It's probably just when the motor car was on its way in.

0:27:420:27:47

Special price to you, £40.

0:27:470:27:49

Oh, OK.

0:27:490:27:51

How does that sound?

0:27:510:27:52

Special price, eh?

0:27:530:27:56

The signed engraving is of Cross Street, Old Chapel, Manchester,

0:27:560:28:00

a mere 100 miles from the auction in Cockermouth.

0:28:000:28:02

Handy.

0:28:020:28:04

Oh! Not really £40.

0:28:040:28:08

So where would you like to be on that?

0:28:080:28:10

I think I'll try £30.

0:28:100:28:12

-Go on then.

-Let's do that.

0:28:120:28:14

£30. That will be fine. OK.

0:28:140:28:15

And that's it. The final day's shopping

0:28:160:28:19

before the auction that will decide this week's winner.

0:28:190:28:23

But before that, our chaps reveal what they bought.

0:28:230:28:26

You know, Charlie, that I... I'm a fan of furniture, like yourself.

0:28:290:28:33

Quite right.

0:28:330:28:34

-Wow!

-Yes!

0:28:350:28:37

This is 1970s. It's the sort of

0:28:370:28:40

nice coffee table for the front room

0:28:400:28:42

and it's made by that magic company Ercol.

0:28:420:28:45

JP, I think it's evocative of our decade, our decade when we were both born.

0:28:450:28:50

-Yes, '72.

-Has it got much stature at the moment? No.

0:28:500:28:54

-I paid £45.

-You didn't?

-I did.

0:28:540:28:57

OK. Well, JP, style.

0:28:570:28:59

Huh! Next up, another piece of furniture.

0:28:590:29:03

Look at that.

0:29:030:29:04

Nice and clean, isn't it?

0:29:040:29:06

Beech wood...

0:29:060:29:08

JP, there's more to it! I have bought a very, very heavy,

0:29:080:29:12

planked-top, oak, trestle dining table...

0:29:120:29:15

-Let me see that.

-In a Puritan-style.

0:29:150:29:18

It's too big to show Jonathan, who has to make do with a photo.

0:29:180:29:21

The six chairs and a table cost me £60.

0:29:210:29:25

Yeah, you might have something there. Look at that.

0:29:250:29:29

-Well, that's quite nice, isn't it?

-OK.

0:29:290:29:32

Cast-iron and a lavender enamel

0:29:320:29:35

umbrella stand. Art Deco.

0:29:350:29:38

Bought in France.

0:29:380:29:39

I absolutely adore this.

0:29:390:29:41

Do you know what, it's really iconic. It's striking. It's lightning.

0:29:410:29:46

And this to me is the epitome of great Art Deco design.

0:29:460:29:49

What did it cost you?

0:29:490:29:51

-£75.

-That's good.

0:29:510:29:53

There you go.

0:29:540:29:56

Basically, what I have here is a very, very nice, cast-iron set of scales, OK?

0:29:560:30:00

-It might not be very old at all.

-No.

0:30:000:30:03

-It might be 30 years old, if that.

-Yeah.

0:30:030:30:05

-I would say £20-£30.

-Is that all?

0:30:050:30:07

Yeah. I know you've probably paid a fiver for it so, yeah.

0:30:070:30:10

-£5.

-Did you really pay a fiver for it? You monkey!

-£5!

0:30:100:30:13

-Here we go, Charlie.

-Oh, golly!

0:30:130:30:15

The finest...

0:30:170:30:19

-It's Chinese, isn't it?

-It's a Chinese violin.

0:30:190:30:21

Oh, the bow's good, isn't it?

0:30:210:30:24

Yeah, well played.

0:30:240:30:25

I think the bow's worth £100.

0:30:270:30:30

At least. But what's it cost you?

0:30:300:30:33

-40 quid.

-Yeah, that's good.

0:30:330:30:35

My only concern is, in a general, parochial sale, will it get missed?

0:30:350:30:39

-Oh, that's nice, isn't it?

-Yeah.

0:30:390:30:42

It's catalogued as being German WMF.

0:30:420:30:45

-Yes.

-It's stylish, although not Art Nouveau. It's near classic.

0:30:450:30:49

It's got a blue glass liner, which might be a replacement.

0:30:490:30:52

But I think it's a nice twin-handled bonbon dish. It cost me seven.

0:30:520:30:56

Yeah, OK.

0:30:560:30:57

That's nice, isn't it?

0:31:000:31:01

Little engraving.

0:31:010:31:03

Signed by the artist.

0:31:030:31:05

Cross Street, Old Chapel, Manchester by Fred W Goolden.

0:31:050:31:09

I like it, JP. Now, I steer away from pictures.

0:31:090:31:12

Why? Because I think pictures, unless they're by a particularly well-known artist,

0:31:120:31:16

-in a general sale, you know, I know, can flop.

-I paid £30.

0:31:160:31:20

Fine. I think, £30. I think there's £20 in that, certainly.

0:31:200:31:23

Right now.

0:31:230:31:25

I think the base is period.

0:31:250:31:28

What worries me, JP, is this figurine.

0:31:280:31:31

She's so glitzy and tidy. I think she's not period in being 1940s.

0:31:310:31:35

I haven't paid a great deal for her, but I think I may have bought a dud.

0:31:350:31:38

What would this cost in a retail outlet?

0:31:380:31:41

Oh, crikey.

0:31:430:31:45

What, on Blackpool seafront?

0:31:450:31:47

-£15.

-Yeah.

0:31:470:31:50

-I paid 30.

-Mmm.

0:31:500:31:52

Next up, Jonathan's buckle.

0:31:520:31:54

That's nice, isn't it?

0:31:580:31:59

-Age-wise, what are we talking, JP? 1915, '20?

-Yeah.

0:31:590:32:03

It is silver.

0:32:030:32:05

I imagine it was quite cheap.

0:32:050:32:08

-13.

-Good.

0:32:080:32:11

You can see the colour, the patination.

0:32:120:32:15

There are some minor issues.

0:32:150:32:17

Do you know what, it might only make £20 in the sale, but I love it.

0:32:170:32:21

I think it's very nice.

0:32:210:32:23

It's very decorative.

0:32:230:32:25

I think you'll get probably £40 to £60.

0:32:250:32:28

-Yeah, yeah, yeah.

-You've paid?

-60.

0:32:280:32:30

They're being very polite now, but how do they really feel about each other's purchases?

0:32:300:32:36

Six chairs and an oak table. £60 is a pittance, it's worth more than that at auction.

0:32:360:32:40

The bow in the right sale would make money.

0:32:400:32:43

In Cockermouth that bow's going to come a cropper.

0:32:430:32:46

OK, they're modern, repro.

0:32:460:32:48

For a fiver though, it's got to make money.

0:32:480:32:51

Who's going to win this auction?

0:32:510:32:54

Me!

0:32:540:32:55

Are these brave or foolish words, Charles?

0:32:550:32:58

We'll soon find out.

0:32:580:33:01

-Are you trying to tell me you reckon you could possibly win with today's show?

-JP...

0:33:010:33:06

-No, no, no. That is entertaining.

-JP, you never know.

0:33:060:33:09

Our chaps started off in Northern Ireland

0:33:120:33:16

and they've been wheeling and dealing all the way to Kendal.

0:33:160:33:19

Today, they reach Cockermouth, their final destination,

0:33:190:33:23

and the auction that will sort the men out from the boys.

0:33:230:33:27

The sun is burning brightly, the hills and pasture land are alive

0:33:270:33:31

to welcome you and I to our final auction

0:33:310:33:34

and, do you know what, I'm getting quite emotional about this.

0:33:340:33:37

Mitchells Fine Art Auctioneers was established in 1873

0:33:370:33:42

and it's very much a rural concern.

0:33:420:33:45

They even sell livestock, although not in these rooms.

0:33:450:33:50

But what does auctioneer James Moore think about our chaps' purchases?

0:33:500:33:55

Ercol table, coming back into fashion.

0:33:550:33:58

It's a good, clean item. Nice colour to it.

0:33:580:34:00

I think that'll do well.

0:34:000:34:02

The bronze Deco figure, my least favourite item today.

0:34:020:34:06

I would have thought that it was most probably a reproduction.

0:34:060:34:09

The umbrella stand...

0:34:090:34:10

it's quite garish.

0:34:100:34:12

I feel that it might be a little bit too much for the sale today.

0:34:120:34:17

Dining table and chairs,

0:34:170:34:18

I think that's the best item that they've brought today. It's modern, but that doesn't matter.

0:34:180:34:24

Jonathan started this leg of the trip with £379.23

0:34:250:34:30

and spent a grand total of £203 on five items.

0:34:300:34:35

Charles, however, started with £278.32, rather less than Jonathan.

0:34:350:34:42

He spent a confident £162, also on five items.

0:34:420:34:46

With the competition still too close to call, both our chaps are feeling the tension.

0:34:490:34:55

How are you feeling?

0:34:550:34:58

Charlie, I am absolutely...

0:34:580:35:01

bricking it.

0:35:010:35:03

That I think means he's scared.

0:35:030:35:05

First up, Charles's bonbon dish, which cost him just £7.

0:35:050:35:08

£15 bid...

0:35:080:35:10

Come on, let's go. Come on.

0:35:100:35:11

£15 bid.

0:35:110:35:13

18. 20. 22. 24. 26.

0:35:130:35:16

-Come on!

-30, 32, 34.

0:35:160:35:21

-34?

-Hanson's off.

0:35:210:35:24

And that's a sweet little profit for you, Charles.

0:35:240:35:28

Tighten your belt, Jonathan, it's time for your silver buckle.

0:35:300:35:34

12, 14, 16, 18.

0:35:340:35:38

-Well played.

-£20.

0:35:380:35:41

-20, 20, £20.

-Any more?

0:35:410:35:42

-22, 24.

-Well played.

0:35:420:35:43

26. £26. Are you all out for 26?

0:35:430:35:47

That's a good price, JP.

0:35:470:35:48

And Jonathan's doubled his money.

0:35:480:35:52

Next up, Charles's £5 scales,

0:35:520:35:55

but will they tip the balance in his favour? Oh!

0:35:550:35:58

£5, 8, 10, 12...

0:35:580:36:02

14, 16, 18.

0:36:020:36:04

-One more. Come on, let's go.

-22.

0:36:040:36:07

Are you all out at 22?

0:36:070:36:09

So far, each item has made a profit.

0:36:110:36:14

Will it be fourth time lucky for Jonathan's umbrella stand?

0:36:160:36:21

-£50 bid.

-Good.

-55, 60, 65.

0:36:210:36:24

-Well, played.

-70.

0:36:240:36:27

-Don't stop there!

-£70.

-It's been raining. It's perfect.

0:36:270:36:30

On commission then at £70.

0:36:300:36:33

No!

0:36:350:36:38

Bad luck, Jonathan, old chap.

0:36:380:36:40

Oh, dear, don't cry.

0:36:400:36:42

Next up, Charles' £30 bronzed, Deco figure.

0:36:420:36:46

The auctioneer doesn't like it, but will the bidders?

0:36:460:36:50

£20 bid.

0:36:500:36:52

-Come on.

-22, 24...

0:36:520:36:55

-Come on!

-26, 28.

0:36:550:36:57

-30.

-Come on!

0:36:570:36:59

-34.

-There you go. It's profit now, Charlie.

0:36:590:37:01

36, 38, 40.

0:37:010:37:03

£40. 42, 44, 46,

0:37:030:37:05

48, 50, 56.

0:37:050:37:09

-This is getting interesting, JP!

-Bid at 56.

0:37:090:37:12

Charles HAS had success with the ladies today. Well done.

0:37:120:37:16

But with five items to go, there's still everything to play for.

0:37:160:37:21

Can Jonathan redeem himself with his violin and bow

0:37:210:37:25

or will he continue to play second fiddle? Huh!

0:37:250:37:29

£20 bid. Bid there at 20.

0:37:290:37:31

25, 30, 35, 40,

0:37:310:37:36

42, 44, 46,

0:37:360:37:40

-48...

-He's being tight-lipped now. He's thinking about it.

-50, 52.

0:37:400:37:43

-It's worth more.

-56, 58, 60.

0:37:430:37:47

Come on, come on!

0:37:480:37:50

62, 64. £64.

0:37:500:37:52

-Bid at 64.

-That's a good profit.

0:37:520:37:55

OK. It's a good buy for £64 though.

0:37:550:37:57

So Jonathan's still in the race, although Charles is edging ahead.

0:37:570:38:04

Now it's Charles' carved chair.

0:38:040:38:07

He fell in love with it, but Jonathan was less convinced.

0:38:070:38:10

-This could kill me, but I don't mind.

-£50 for it?

-No!

0:38:100:38:14

-£20 bid then.

-Wrong object.

0:38:140:38:16

-£20 bid.

-Come on.

0:38:160:38:18

-For the chair at 20.

-Please one more.

0:38:180:38:20

-Crazy.

-32, 34, 36, 38,

0:38:200:38:24

-40, 42.

-There you go. It's getting there.

0:38:240:38:27

Come on, it's a wonderful chair.

0:38:270:38:28

-£44 then. At 44. 44.

-Crazy.

0:38:280:38:30

46, 48, 50,

0:38:300:38:33

-52...

-It's still going, Charlie.

-54.

0:38:330:38:36

-It's creeping up.

-56.

-There you go.

0:38:360:38:38

-56. Are you all out?

-It just shows.

0:38:380:38:41

Blast! That's Charles' first loss.

0:38:410:38:45

It's a general household sale, I've come a cropper.

0:38:450:38:47

Item number eight is Jonathan's engraving.

0:38:490:38:51

He paid £30 for it and is hoping it will attract local interest.

0:38:510:38:55

Quite why I don't know.

0:38:550:38:56

£10 bid for the engraving. 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 22...

0:38:560:39:01

Nice subject.

0:39:010:39:02

24, 26, 28,

0:39:020:39:04

30, 32.

0:39:040:39:06

-That's all right.

-£32 then. At 32.

0:39:060:39:09

Yeah, there we go.

0:39:090:39:10

-That's about right.

-£32. At 32. £32.

0:39:100:39:13

Yup, it's a profit, Jonathan, but only miniscule.

0:39:130:39:15

And now comes the battle of the tables.

0:39:180:39:21

The first one to go under the hammer is Jonathan's Ercol coffee table.

0:39:220:39:26

30, 32. 32, 34...

0:39:260:39:29

-That's a really good price.

-It's not!

0:39:290:39:31

40, 42, 44,

0:39:310:39:34

46...

0:39:340:39:35

-Yes!

-48...

-Yes!

0:39:350:39:36

-50.

-This style, I can't believe that.

0:39:360:39:39

-52?

-That's a massive, massive price. Get away.

0:39:390:39:42

And it's another small profit for Jonathan.

0:39:430:39:46

Now it's time for Charles' oak table and six chairs.

0:39:470:39:50

They're not antiques, but they sure are practical.

0:39:500:39:54

So you need to clear probably 180 on it to win the show.

0:39:540:39:59

It is so, so exciting because it is so close. Everything's on this.

0:39:590:40:03

At £150 on commission. Bid at 165.

0:40:030:40:08

-70.

-Come on! Come on.

-75, 80.

-80.

0:40:080:40:12

-85, 90, 95, 200.

-£200!

0:40:120:40:18

-Don't believe it.

-205, 210.

0:40:180:40:20

15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40.

0:40:200:40:26

It's not looking good for Jonathan.

0:40:260:40:29

-45.

-Oh, you son of a gun.

0:40:290:40:33

60, 65, 70, 75, 80, 85,

0:40:330:40:40

90, 95, 300.

0:40:400:40:42

-£300!

-Rounding it up. 305.

0:40:420:40:46

It was the last lot of our entire series. My heart is going...

0:40:460:40:49

I feel it.

0:40:490:40:51

I can't believe it. I can't believe it, seriously.

0:40:520:40:55

Whooo! Charles has made a staggering £245 profit.

0:40:550:40:59

Easily the biggest of the week.

0:40:590:41:01

Oh, you're a so and so.

0:41:010:41:03

You really, really are. I hate you, Charlie.

0:41:030:41:06

Ah! Jonathan started this leg with £379.23, which was marvellous.

0:41:060:41:13

After the auctioneer's commission today though, he made a loss of £2

0:41:130:41:17

and finishes today with £377.23, and that's tough.

0:41:170:41:22

God...

0:41:240:41:25

Charles started the leg with £278.32.

0:41:260:41:31

He made a whopping profit of £227.63 after commission

0:41:310:41:37

and comes out on top with £505.95.

0:41:370:41:42

JP, thanks for the memories!

0:41:420:41:44

I really could cry!

0:41:470:41:49

It's been a week our two chaps won't forget...

0:41:490:41:53

..as they dashed across the country, making friends...

0:41:540:41:58

-Between friends. Between friends. Between friends.

-Between friends?

0:41:580:42:02

..and having fun along the way.

0:42:020:42:04

# I'm so excited!

0:42:040:42:06

# And I just can't hide it

0:42:060:42:08

# I'm about to lost control and I think I like it... #

0:42:110:42:14

They both tried to break more antiques than they bought.

0:42:140:42:17

SNAPPING

0:42:170:42:20

SMASHING

0:42:210:42:24

But through the highs and lows of five auctions...

0:42:270:42:31

Get in there!

0:42:310:42:32

Oh, no!

0:42:330:42:35

It all came down to a simple oak table and six chairs.

0:42:350:42:39

# I'm so excited... #

0:42:390:42:42

As the week draws to a close, Charles,

0:42:420:42:44

who came last in the first series has snatched the number one slot.

0:42:440:42:49

Road Trip rookie Jonathan is in second position...

0:42:490:42:53

for the time being, at least.

0:42:530:42:56

The feeling is just complete, utter contentment.

0:42:560:43:00

Don't gloat. But remember, there are still another five weeks to go.

0:43:000:43:07

Next week, it's the turn of the flamboyant Charlie Ross.

0:43:070:43:11

Oh!

0:43:110:43:12

And the man who will try and get something for nothing, Mark Stacey.

0:43:120:43:17

No price? It's free.

0:43:170:43:19

They will be travelling through the Midlands and Wales,

0:43:190:43:23

hoping to turn antiques into profits, but things don't always go to plan.

0:43:230:43:27

Oh, you've thrown it into reverse!

0:43:270:43:29

Subtitles by Red Bee Media Ltd

0:43:350:43:38

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0:43:380:43:41

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