Yeah. They are one of the only KZbin vids I can put on for my mum and she actually takes an interest in it. 🙂
@mollymaybe15 сағат бұрын
"brightly colored [smoking pipes] for children everywhere"
@JJONNYREPP12 сағат бұрын
10 More Mesmerising Manufacturing Films | 3rd Edition 2059pm 14.10.24 sheff united fans should take note...
@CandidZulu15 сағат бұрын
Shirt tie and a jacket, no matter the profession!
@cyberGEK15 сағат бұрын
What a nightmare! So glad we’re past that nonsense. It kills me watching things like railroad workers hammering in railway spikes in a dress shirt, sport jacket and bowler hat! This is why denim was invented people! 😄
@mls866815 сағат бұрын
The magic of Film...
@yotaiji01215 сағат бұрын
I think probably instructed to do so for the film
@CandidZulu14 сағат бұрын
@@yotaiji012 No people actually dressed like this. I'm old enough to remember this generation. My grandparents looked like this!
@sprint955st11 сағат бұрын
@@yotaiji012my dad drove a combine harvester, fork lift and a bulldozer wearing a tweed jacket, denim dungarees and a shirt and tie with slick back hair just like these fellers.
@JohnDoe-tx8lq12 сағат бұрын
"The whole yacht can be turned out in three weeks and will never need maintenance.." 16:32 wow, for a sea going yacht with a painted hull and wooden fixtures, that's quite a claim! 😄
@LeftIsBest00116 сағат бұрын
I want one of those swords and a concrete yacht too!!
@exploreSwedenswestcoast8 сағат бұрын
This is a remarkable film, truly fascinating from start to finish.
@yutehube446810 сағат бұрын
This series of manufacturing videos has been amazing up to now. 🙂 I'm "only" 47 years old... imagine living in the 1950's and 1960's! Even I can see how much of a simpler and dare I say better time it was. In the US they had it so easy, one man could work and bring in enough money to fund his wife staying at home with their children, have 2 cars and probably pay off the house in under ten years. Oh how things have changed. 🙁 Here in the UK in 1987 the average house price was just over 2 times more than the average yearly salary. Today in 2024 the average house price is more than 10 times the average yearly salary. Just have a think about how terrible that is and how absurd these days are compared to even 1987 (when *they* would have been complaining about how bad it is and harking back to how much better it was in the 1960's). What's happening I mean really. God help the kids being born today and what it will be like financially for them when they get to 25 years old and need to buy a house in the year 2050. I will be 73 by then if I live that long and will probably be here again on KZbin watching videos of 1990's and 2000's stuff that will be the equivalent of these British Pathé videos.
@adityanastik809816 сағат бұрын
Love and support from India ❤🇮🇳🇮🇳
@michaelselby535915 сағат бұрын
So much lost technology and skills. Some to advancements and a lot to overseas competition.
@hypercomms20012 сағат бұрын
When I was young in the 1960s, my father was a surgeon [ear nose and throat surgeon], and he had real human bones, that he had kept from his time when he was a medical student. It used to scare me when I went to bed at night.... When I was in my teens... I used to use the skull from my father's bone collection as a bookend... in the end I think we sold the bones back to the university.
@sweetbeautifulpretty16 сағат бұрын
I love vídeos ❤❤❤❤❤
@Scrimjer14 сағат бұрын
I always wonder what where the stuff that is being made is today
@JJONNYREPP12 сағат бұрын
10 More Mesmerising Manufacturing Films | 3rd Edition 2108pm 14.10.24 they still have the rope making hovels down London way... the only reason he was put out to tender was due to hemp being overhauled by cotton as the material of choice.... the rope walk was used as a nod to the fact you have nowt going for you or were on a road to nowhere. sad, really..
@andrewoverland288424 минут бұрын
So sad to see all of these skills now disappeared overseas. RIP British craftsmanship.
@heintmeyer22963 сағат бұрын
the horn section had job security...
@stephenwilliams92614 сағат бұрын
And now we can't make a tin can as Fred Dibnah once said .
@WiwatChang2 сағат бұрын
Wonder how they filmed in the freezer without the lens fogging or frosting up?
@amonynous90419 сағат бұрын
"Brightly colored pipes for children everywhere" lol wtf?!
@patrickrose12217 сағат бұрын
Happy days 😄😉👍
@TristanMorrow14 сағат бұрын
18:08 *Maps!* 🗺️🗺️🗺️🗺️🗺️🗺️
@ZaphodHarkonnen11 сағат бұрын
The puns. 🤣
@zwalada14 сағат бұрын
2 spooky 4 me
@tymz-r-achangin7 сағат бұрын
Easily got my thumbs up! Nicely presented and would definitely rather watching these products here being made with more authentic craftsmanship and quality materials, than to watch the modern junk being made in commi china
@sprint955st11 сағат бұрын
No effective PPE except brown jacket. Handling those dusty items for years no doubt caused skin issues and breathing in God knows what…ugh. I’m no snowflake, but there’s respiratory complications waiting to happen here.
@PulcherIkhthyes2 сағат бұрын
Why were ripped made in a dim lit cave??.
@EnglishTurbines15 сағат бұрын
Skilled people manufacturing and creating wealth....Now, a thing of the past.....BLiars Children have no clue how to do this stuff....🤔😳🙄🇬🇧
@JJONNYREPP12 сағат бұрын
10 More Mesmerising Manufacturing Films | 3rd Edition 2047pm 14.10.24 dem bones suggest distribution right aren't easily won... europe lost such distribution rights after the 2nd world war to..........................................the yanks!!! now that Europe is back on it's feet pathe and the like should make a concerted effort to engage with a resurgence in such matters as this.................................... without disney.
@yotaiji01215 сағат бұрын
That off kilter aspect is messing me up
@grifon198115 сағат бұрын
I'm a fan of British Pathe vids, but this one just feels like some sick cosmic joke. Not sure why that is. No bueno.
@fortysomethingbadgirls217314 сағат бұрын
Maybe it's because it just freezes through the trades and we would like a bit more info rather than a rush job. It's like fast fashion, trading off quality for quantity....too many occupations in a short video
@grifon198113 сағат бұрын
@@fortysomethingbadgirls2173 btw love your username. You may be onto something there. I agree it's the lack of focus on the quality, and too much emphasis on "cheapness"