The scene is set at the turn of the 20th century, with Emily Firmin (Peter Firmin's daughter) playing the part of the
Victorian child Emily. The first antique village vignette is a cropped image of
Horrabridge, Devon, taken in 1898, though nothing is known of the other photo of the children with the pram. The shop window was at the Firmin family home in
Blean, Kent. Each episode begins in the same way: through a series of
sepia photographs, the viewer is told of a little girl named Emily who owns a shop. She never sells any merchandise, but instead finds lost or broken objects and later displays them in the front window after they have been mended so their owners might come in and reclaim them. Emily leaves an object in front of her favourite stuffed toy, a large, saggy, pink-and-white striped cloth cat named Bagpuss, and recites the following verse: After Emily departs, Bagpuss wakes up. The programme shifts from sepia to colour
stop motion film and various toys in the shop come to life. After being introduced by the narrator, the toys discuss what the new object is; one of them tells a story related to the object (sometimes shown in an animated thought bubble over Bagpuss's head), often with a song, accompanied by Gabriel on the
banjo (which often sounded a lot more like a guitar) and then the mice, singing in high-pitched squeaky harmony to the tune of
Sumer is icumen in as they work, mending the broken object. There is much banter between the characters, with the pompous Yaffle constantly finding fault with the playful mice: his complaint, 'Those mice are never serious!' becomes his main catchphrase. Peace is always restored by the end of the episode, however, usually thanks to the timely intervention of Bagpuss, Gabriel or Madeleine. The newly mended object is then placed in the shop window, so that its owner might see it as they pass and come in to collect it. Bagpuss yawns and goes to sleep, and the colour fades to sepia and the other toys freeze in place as the narrator says the following: ==Broadcasting==