david harper antiques© Photo: BBC

Antiques Road Trip's David Harper opens up about 'worst' part of show

The antiques dealer has been part of the BBC programme since 2012

TV & Film Writer
July 14, 2022

David Harper has been a much-loved member of the Antiques Road Trip family since the daytime programme first began on BBC One back in 2012. 

MORE: Antiques Road Trip: Inside Izzie Balmer and Charles Hanson's friendship and career connection

Over the last nine years, he's uncovered incredible antiques and made some unbelievable profits at auction. However, the antiques dealer, 52, has revealed not everything goes smoothly and that he, along with fellow presenters Roo Irvine, Christina Trevanion and Phil Serrell, have experienced huge losses on the show.

WATCH: The biggest sale on Antiques Road Trip history!

"Losses and disaster in auction are the worst," he said. "When we are filming these shows, you can be as knowledgeable and animated about an object as you would like. But once you take it to an auction, and it's just a cold loss, that's hard."

MORE: Meet Antiques Road Trip presenter Roo Irvine

MORE: David Harper requests daughter's school fees to be refunded for surprising reason

"Sometimes they couldn't give a monkey about the object, it can all go badly wrong," he continued adding that it's worse when he's filming Celebrity Antiques Road Trip."

© Photo: BBC

David and Roo on Antiques Road Trip

He continued to the Express: "You're meant to be an expert, and when it all goes badly wrong, they look at you like you have got some sort of lurgy and they want to get away from you as quickly as possible."

However, the show has also seen incredible sales too. Back in 2018, fellow presenter Paul Laidlaw sold a sub-miniature camera for £20,000 after purchasing it for just £60 from an antique store in Margate, Kent.

MORE: David Harper talks 'demanding' guests on Celebrity Antiques Road Trip

MORE: Meet Antiques Road Trip star David Harper's wife

© Photo: BBC

David and Izzie Balmer on Antiques Road Trip

Paul was gobsmacked when the item, an extremely rare camera combined with a microscope known as a Chambre Automatique cameras, was purchased by a private collector in Switzerland via an online bid.

At the time, he said: "I have no words, I'm over the moon. I genuinely am flabbergasted. You go treasure hunting - but does it get any better than that? I don't think it does!" 

Like this story? Sign up to our newsletter to get other stories like this delivered straight to your inbox.

Sign up to Off Camera for all the gossip and goings-on from the wonderful world of TV and film

Email Address

By entering your details, you are agreeing to HELLO! Magazine User Data Protection Policy. You can unsubscribe at any time. For more information, please click here.

More TV and Film

See more