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An Antiques Roadshow guest was left stunned after discovering the value of an item she had picked up for just £90 - with the expert declaring it was among the finest examples he had ever come across.

The BBC's much-loved Sunday night staple returned with an episode from West Yorkshire, where hopefuls brought along their most prized possessions in the hope of uncovering hidden treasures.

Within minutes, specialist Ronnie Archer Morgan was visibly taken aback when he was presented with an American Powder Horn - a striking carved cowhorn once used to carry gunpowder.

As he examined the intricate piece, he immediately told the guest: 'I really like this, and I'm really curious to know what made you bring that to the roadshow?'

The owner explained her interest, replying: 'I'm fascinated by the Wild West, so when I see something like this which I think came from America, I like it.'

Confirming her instincts, Ronnie enthused: 'It's a powder horn and it's a cowhorn. This is a fabulous thing, I think it's stunning.

An Antiques Roadshow guest was stunned at the value of an item she had picked up for just £90 - with expert Ronnie Archer Morgan (pictured) calling it 'one of the best' he'd seen
Ronnie was visibly taken aback when he was presented with an American Powder Horn (pictured) - a striking carved cowhorn once used to carry gunpowder

'It's the sense of design and the way it's executed. I've never seen such high relief on an American Powder Horn.'

The guest revealed she had purchased the item for just £90, prompting further astonishment from the expert.

'I've never seen one with [such a] colour... this is very curious, I've never seen that,' he said, still marvelling at the craftsmanship.

When it came to the valuation, Ronnie declared: 'I think it would be estimated at £1,500 to £2,000.'

Clearly overwhelmed, the owner gasped: 'What!' before breathing a sharp sigh, shaking her head and finally managing to exclaim: 'Good heavens.'

'It's one of the best I've ever seen,' Ronnie reassured her, as the audience surrounding them broke into warm applause.

The delighted guest added: 'Really? I'm absolutely thrilled,' before thanking the expert.

In his detailed analysis of the horn, Ronnie highlighted its unusual use of colour. 'I don't know whether it's waxed or whether it's lacquer, this would have been colourful.

When it came to the valuation, Ronnie estimated it at £1,500 to £2,000 - leaving the guest (pictured) overwhelmed

'It would have been garish originally; this would have been bright green, like emerald green,' he explained.

He then pointed to a surprising detail hidden within the horn's surface. 'In the end, there, we've got a picture of a woman in a big hat,' he revealed, leaving the guest astonished as she admitted: 'I didn't know that.'

'There's her face, there's her shoulders, and it's set in under the transparent horn, and I just wondered if it's a kind of pin-up that the hunter carried this pin-up because it looks like a printed image.

'One can't tell, and you'll never take it out, you can't. This is very curious, I've never seen that,' he added.

It comes as an expert on the show was left astonished after being presented with a never-before-seen Fabergé piece worth a staggering sum - prompting gasps from the crowd.

During a vintage episode filmed at Beaumaris Castle in Anglesey, north Wales, jewellery specialist Geoffrey Munn was shown two extraordinary items.

One was a pendant and the other was an aquamarine brooch, both crafted by the famed Russian jeweller Fabergé around 1900.

They had been brought in by a guest on behalf of a friend, who wanted to discover their true value.

'Well, I'm jolly glad she did because they're very, very exciting things for me,' Munn said as he examined the treasures.

The pendant, he explained, was set with diamond initials over a sunburst geocache design and inscribed in Cyrillic with the phrase 'Maybe it's better not to wait'.

When it came to valuing the items, the expert did not hold back. 'This one is an unusual prototype, never seen the like before.

'I'm going to say £10,000 for this one,' he revealed of the pendant. 'And I'm going to go absolutely raving mad for this one, which is sort of predictable, and tell you that I think it ought to be worth £35,000 to £40,000.'

BBCAntiques Roadshow

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