My antique dealer mom always said “don’t hold a pitcher by the handle” and never tip a chair or table etc back on its legs. They can break, or weaken the leg. She was a smart woman.
Regarding timestamp 00:50 and flannel production during WWI, flannel was used to clothed the men and women, who back home was nothing more than your working class type, but in times of conflict, those same descent, honest, hardworking souls become separated from family and loved ones to become expendable resources for reasons many barley understood, several million perished, buried where they fell, lost in mass grave or nameless in the soil on foreign lands with simple white cross or star marking they existed, many souls named but due to the nightmare reality for the family of those souls, bombed out cities, unemployment, illness, lack of services, interruption in education and the affect on life expectancy, those souls are lost in time. How were those men and women compensated for this interruption, how were loved ones left at home compensated for loss of a farther or son and daughter income. So who benefits from conflict, in this timestamp we here the flannel producers and uniform manufacturer got compensated very well, enough for several generations to live a life few can imagine, wealth begets wealth, the poor and working class get .. Thank You. Stay Well and always curious. All gave some, some gave all and the chosen few got paid.
The Antiques Roadshow very neatly overlooks this grim truth because, well, if they went too much down that path then they couldn't really celebrate any signs of material wealth.
On 13.23 the expert is wrong. This is not Italian artist but a Russian artist. The artist with the name like Ignatiy Spiridon just simply can not be Italian.
Thank you for the uploads. I'm so surprized how many really old items (18th century!) are in private possesions. Britain is very special that way.
I used to love watching these with my Grandmother. She always hoped they would do one from her old home town Richmond Yorkshire.
Greetings to you people of Wales..bless you all
What a grand time everyone seems to be enjoying!
My antique dealer mom always said “don’t hold a pitcher by the handle” and never tip a chair or table etc back on its legs. They can break, or weaken the leg. She was a smart woman.
@Chatty Kathie. The pitcher information was helpful, the suggestion about the furniture, well that's just common sense.
That art nouveau poster was a dream
My brother lives in Newcastle Emlyn and he has a number of pieces of furniture that are collectors items. I’m surprised that he’s not there
@Daniel Thomas. So was I🙄
Interesting to see a younger Tim Wonnacott!
This show rocks!
Looking for Series 17 Episode 12 please!
The difference between Salmon and Trout are obvious just by looking at them.
Lovely item! Just one bit of input from this old fly fisherperson: these are brown trout, not rainbow trout. Just google them to compare. Cheers!
In Ampshire we call them Brouwn Trowt
Try to add up how many times they say “yes”
@Laurie Tindall. I'd rather hear that than the Americans always saying "Wow"🙄. And I'm American!!!!🤷
Is the first guy who Alan Partridge was based on?
Brown Trout peeps!
I wonder why Welsh dressers were not presented at these west wales events. I remember 18th century in my family and I was brought up in that area
i guess it's kinda off topic but does anybody know of a good place to stream new series online ?
@Xander Kristopher lately I have been using Flixzone. You can find it on google :)
I couldn't understand what the 10,000 pound ball was...
A golf ball. that's what they used at first in the game
The guy w the cabinet,#2
is Jay Leno in 15 years
✔️
Regarding timestamp 00:50 and flannel production during WWI, flannel was used to clothed the men and women, who back home was nothing more than your working class type, but in times of conflict, those same descent, honest, hardworking souls become separated from family and loved ones to become expendable resources for reasons many barley understood, several million perished, buried where they fell, lost in mass grave or nameless in the soil on foreign lands with simple white cross or star marking they existed, many souls named but due to the nightmare reality for the family of those souls, bombed out cities, unemployment, illness, lack of services, interruption in education and the affect on life expectancy, those souls are lost in time. How were those men and women compensated for this interruption, how were loved ones left at home compensated for loss of a farther or son and daughter income. So who benefits from conflict, in this timestamp we here the flannel producers and uniform manufacturer got compensated very well, enough for several generations to live a life few can imagine, wealth begets wealth, the poor and working class get .. Thank You. Stay Well and always curious. All gave some, some gave all and the chosen few got paid.
The Antiques Roadshow very neatly overlooks this grim truth because, well, if they went too much down that path then they couldn't really celebrate any signs of material wealth.
£1000 in '95 is almost £2000 in 2021
On 13.23 the expert is wrong. This is not Italian artist but a Russian artist. The artist with the name like Ignatiy Spiridon just simply can not be Italian.
It's Ignace (pronounced ig-NAT-chee), not Ignatiy, and he was born in Rome. The family name is originally Greek.