Airing since 1979, this popular programme, which has spawned multiple international versions, travels across Britain (with occasional trips to other countries, such as Canada and Australia), bringing together in each location specialists in antiques and fine arts to have them appraise items brought in by local residents, whether they are collectors looking to turn trash into treasure or ordinary folks hoping Grandma's old painting might now fund the kids' education. Items featured on the programme often have an interesting story attached to them or have some connection to that episode's venue. While some items that are brought in are worth a fortune, others are worthless.
Fiona Bruce and her team of experts travel to Beverley Minster in East Yorkshire, where they value heirlooms including Victorian paintings and a medieval ring.
The team pays a second visit to Beverley Minster, East Yorkshire, to examine objects including a pair of medical leech jars.
The team heads to Somerleyton Hall, near Lowestoft, where the objects up for valuation include a bracelet given to Queen Victoria.
The team visits the Steam Museum in Swindon, where objects being examined include one of the rarest pieces of silver seen on the show and a valuable painting.
The team values more rarities at Brighton College, including items found in a safe that once belonged to Agatha Christie.
Fiona Bruce and the experts pay a second visit to Hopetoun House in South Queensferry, Edinburgh, valuing items including Victorian dresses.
Fiona Bruce and the experts head to the British Museum in London to value more of the public's keepsakes including a pair of wooden pillars from HMS Victory.
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Tatton Park in Cheshire, where items include one of the rarest known pieces of Royal Worcester porcelain.
Fiona Bruce and the experts examine more rarities at Tatton Park in Cheshire, including an inkstand with a link to Admiral Nelson.
The experts value items at Hatfield House in Hertfordshire, while Fiona Bruce goes for a drive in a Daimler Dart - the car featured in the programme's opening credits.
Fiona Bruce and the team head to Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, where objects include a tile commemorating one of the biggest bare-knuckle fights in history.
The team values more decorative objects and rarities at Chatsworth House in Derbyshire, including a painting thought to be by Constable.
Fiona Bruce and the experts visit Blair Castle in Perthshire, where they examine valuables including a chair once used by Albert Einstein.
Fiona Bruce and the experts visit Hampton Court Castle in Herefordshire, where items include an heirloom from the early days of photography.
The team visits the Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth, Devon, where items up for valuation include a relic from HMS Victory.
The team values more rarities at the Britannia Royal Naval College in Dartmouth, Devon, including the personal effects of a Nobel Peace Prize winner.
Fiona Bruce and the team visit Victoria Hall in Saltaire, West Yorkshire, where items up for valuation include a doodle by LS Lowry.
Fiona Bruce presents more valuations from Saltaire, West Yorkshire, as the experts examine items including an inkwell that once belonged to Charles Dickens.
Fiona Bruce and the experts head to the Natural History Museum of Wales at St Fagans, near Cardiff. Among the items featured is a doll given as a gift by Queen Mary.
The experts return to the British Museum, where items brought in by members of the public include photos of a young Elvis Presley.
Fiona Bruce and the experts return to the Museum of Steam in Swindon, where items up for valuation include an 18th-century doll.
Fiona Bruce and the experts return to Hatfield House in Hertfordshire, where items up for valuation include a four-headed doll and a life-size stuffed lion.
Members of the public bring keepsakes and rarities to be valued at Winchester Cathedral, including an unusual relic from the Charge of the Light Brigade.
More keepsakes and rarities are valued at Winchester Cathedral, including a recipe book from Jane Austen's household and a four-barrelled golden pistol.
Fiona Bruce and the experts visit Hutton-in-the-Forest, a country house in Cumbria, where items include a painting that was once used for target practice.
Fiona Bruce and the team return to Hampton Court Castle in Herefordshire, where items include a silver dish given to a former prime minister.
Fiona Bruce looks back at memorable finds from past series, and the experts investigate whether a viewer's piece of jewellery is one of the rarest of its kind.
Fiona Bruce introduces more items from the show's visits to Hutton-in-the-Forest, Chatsworth and the British Museum.