• 1
    collected
  • 2016-01-07T05:00:00Z on PBS
  • 27m
  • 5h 51m (13 episodes)
  • United States
Looks at the treasures viewers may have in their attics, garages or at their grandmothers' houses. It's an educational and fun half-hour that searches for some of the most fascinating antiques and treasures found across our Chesapeake region. Viewers will discover the intriguing stories our possessions can tell us. And their values will amaze you!

13 episodes

Season Premiere

2016-01-07T05:00:00Z

6x01 601

Season Premiere

6x01 601

  • 2016-01-07T05:00:00Z27m

Season 6 premiere! We open with an exquisite Marquis diamond ring worth at least five times what the collector paid. Historically significant baseball autographed by Jackie Robinson & Branch Rickey. A stunning 17th C. map by John Speed, a model of a famous lunar module and “Plain Jane” the skeleton close the show. Plus, a feature collection of Asian & French Baroque heirlooms.

2016-01-14T05:00:00Z

6x02 602

6x02 602

  • 2016-01-14T05:00:00Z27m

Civil War memorabilia: inscribed sword, rare pistol, document signed by Lincoln. Autographed first edition of “Gone with the Wind.” Historian/appraiser Ross Kelbaugh highlights 19th century “cabinet card” photographs. “Crème de la crème stag-head coin silver spoons and an intricately inlaid Syrian chest. Close with a collector reliving his glory days with The Charlie Byrd Trio.

2016-01-21T05:00:00Z

6x03 603

6x03 603

  • 2016-01-21T05:00:00Z27m

Open with a Norman Rockwell poster for the first-ever Boy Scout Jamboree. There’s an engraved gold watch, bought rusty at a pawn shop. A collector enjoys his schooner painting by Baltimore artist Otto Mullenfeld, worth thousands. We uncover the history of an African American bronco rider. A golf pro restores antique clocks. We close with exquisite Southwestern pueblo pottery.

2016-01-28T05:00:00Z

6x04 604

6x04 604

  • 2016-01-28T05:00:00Z27m

We open with a beautiful Thomas Hunt painting of California’s Balboa Bay, worth twenty times what the collector paid. Our appraisers admire a delicately inlaid Syrian gaming table and an Art Nouveau vase. There’s a cartoon mock up by Baltimorian Richard Yardley and a Russian bronze hunting sculpture. Plus, our appraisers’ opine on the economy’s effect on the antiques market.

2016-02-04T05:00:00Z

6x05 605

6x05 605

  • 2016-02-04T05:00:00Z27m

First, a cannon-like punt gun used on the Chesapeake to hunt geese. Next, a document signed by Duke Alexis of Russia of the 19th C. Imperial Royal family. There’s a stunning painting by Hermann Simon, an elaborate Japanese Satsuma vase and two lovely illustrations by fashion artist Nadja Merino. Feature: a TV preservationist fascinates with his collection of local TV memorabilia.

2016-02-11T05:00:00Z

6x06 606

6x06 606

  • 2016-02-11T05:00:00Z27m

Begin with an elegant diamond charm bracelet. A Baltimore actress brings her signed Andy Warhol poster. Next, a “Tramp Art” picture frame fashioned from cigar boxes. Our appraisers rave: rare protection papers for a free black seaman and a working steam engine. Close with a 1820s Kentucky pistol. Highlight: Appraiser Lyman Speckheuer advises how to safeguard valuable documents.

2016-02-18T05:00:00Z

6x07 607

6x07 607

  • 2016-02-18T05:00:00Z27m

We kick off with four majestic Native Am. squash blossom necklaces. There’s a portable liquor cabinet owned by the Baltimore inventor of Bromo-Seltzer. One collector brings authentic Baltimore Colts memorabilia and a Tom Clancy high school short story. Discover Victorian hair art. We close with Japanese watercolors by the famous Hiroshi Toshida. Feature: BWI/TSA Lost and Found.

2016-02-25T05:00:00Z

6x08 608

6x08 608

  • 2016-02-25T05:00:00Z27m

We open with a beautiful portrait miniature by a famed New Orleans artist. Our appraisers admire a WWI British naval officer’s sword and a Pablo Picasso pottery vase. Appraiser Jerry Coates sharpens our appreciation for presentation swords. There’s a framed naval warship diorama and an abstract lithograph by Robert Motherwell. Plus, a rare Alabama slave document.

2016-03-03T05:00:00Z

6x09 609

6x09 609

  • 2016-03-03T05:00:00Z27m

We open with a sparkling three-diamond platinum ring. There’s a mechanical bank dating back to 1883, and an eccentric Afghanistan folk art rug. Plus, Civil War letters with “serious value,” prints from the “Darktown” series by Currier &Ives, and a lovely watercolor by a famous Chinese painter. Appraiser Highlight: finding “diamonds in the rough” at yard sales.

2016-03-10T05:00:00Z

6x10 610

6x10 610

  • 2016-03-10T05:00:00Z27m

Begin with an early exquisitely detailed China trade watercolor of Hong Kong. Next, an elaborate Japanese wedding dress kimono, a baseball autographed by the 1934 American All-Star Team, and a Chris-Craft model boat made of matchsticks. Close with an elegant 14-carat gold jade and diamond bracelet. Feature: one of world’s largest robot collections.

2016-03-23T04:00:00Z

6x11 611

6x11 611

  • 2016-03-23T04:00:00Z27m

We kick off with a rare 1863 Henry rifle worth tens of thousands! Our appraisers assess an 18th C. five-legged gaming table and a colorful Victor Vasarely silkscreen print. An autographed letter from Theordore Roosevelt contrasts with an alluring wedding painting by folk artist Clementine Hunter.

2016-03-30T04:00:00Z

6x12 612

6x12 612

  • 2016-03-30T04:00:00Z27m

First, an elaborate Japanese screen with horses – did the collector pay too much? Appraisers rave: a German pull-toy and wagon, a bronze stencil used in the seafood trade in St. Mary’s County, an early 1900’s train set in mint condition, and autographed Stepin Fechit postcards. Plus, a prominent Baltimore socialite’s Civil War diary. Appraiser Highlight: antique bronzes.

2016-04-06T04:00:00Z

6x13 613

6x13 613

  • 2016-04-06T04:00:00Z27m

Season 6 finale: Begin with a delicate Venetian watercolor by noted painter. Irving Berlin’s WWII letters to parents of military performers. Appraisers delight over Persian rug and a tramp-art matchstick boat. Fun “What’s my Line” sign-in sheets with celebrity autographs including Anthony Quinn & Montgomery Cliff. Plus, miniature the crime dioramas that created forensics.

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