I LOVE THIS CHANNEL SO MUCH THAT I CAN'T CONTAIN MYSELF
@JM-zp9ik2 жыл бұрын
It's rare and refreshing to see such competence, articulation, and intelligent delivery, I hope a large network offers Mr. Bird a high-budget documentary series, the world needs it!
@threed.design29113 жыл бұрын
The outtakes were the best.... think wintery thoughts... Fab class- love it
@evelynpromenade7894 жыл бұрын
I love your classes so much! They'are so enlightening. I'm not even your student, I was just doing some research about New Art Decor and I was luck enough to find your channel . ♡
@rumeysacakr72273 жыл бұрын
Hi, you're better than my history teacher, thanks for doing what you're doing !!!
@sashacalori8 ай бұрын
Thank you for these series of lectures. Inspiration manifest and much appreciated.
@houstonsam616310 ай бұрын
An excellent tour of key advances and technologies, with a very effective emphasis on the critical technological enablers, steam power and iron.
@william_design2 жыл бұрын
This is an amazing reasorce for ID students! Thanks from the UK!
@deborahmatatall2 жыл бұрын
I didn’t know I was interested in any of this stuff and it was completely fascinating. I love this channel!🌸
@grittykitty502 жыл бұрын
Ditto. I was just sitting here thinking, "How very interesting ID is and it's so wonderful that this instructor infuses this information with anecdotes and personal asides that bring it all home." How fortunate we are to have found this channel.
@tonyatippetts23162 жыл бұрын
I have loved every one of these videos! I have never looked at it from your angle, form follows aesthetics is remarkably interesting. I have always liked the form follows function school. This has widened my scope. Thank you very much.
@faithinverity85232 жыл бұрын
I ordered something on eBay and it was shipped using FedEx. I did the arithmetic and it travled to me at the average speed of ten miles per hour. We've come so far.
@moibastien3 жыл бұрын
That shirt is everything !!!
@HistoryofID3 жыл бұрын
I agree. A treasure. I wear it sparingly to extend its life....
@brandonbjerre71452 жыл бұрын
Really great channel
@sadiecarl19472 жыл бұрын
Are you still paying attention to the comments on this page, Matthew? I found your videos earlier this year and have been fascinated by them. For years, I've been interested in the story of the "New Orleans", the first steamboat to travel to NOLA in 1811. About a year ago, while watching "Pride and Prejudice", it occurred to me that the characters lived during the same time frame as the invention of the steam boat. This small realization added depth to the atmosphere and characters in both Austen's novel and the people associated with the "New Orleans". And then I found your history of ID and another burrow was added to my rabbit hole.
@william_design2 жыл бұрын
For us unlucky lot not in your class is there any way you could post some links to the key text books! It would be really appreciated, I'm loving the lectures and would like to study the text book alongside! 🙏 Thanks so much Matthew!
@HistoryofID2 жыл бұрын
There is no one perfect textbook. David Raizman's excellent History of Modern Design is the go-to. I don't use it because this is specifically an Industrial Design class, and it includes fashion and graphic design and more. I use the Fiell's Industrial Design A to Z because it is affordable and offers a nice overview (LOTS of entries, lots of color pictures, lots of information, not a lot of "ideas.") and then support it/complete it with Carma Gorman's EXCELLENT Industrial Design Reader (all primary source writings nicely introduced and explained by Gorman. No pictures, LOTS of ideas). With the pairing we get where we need to go.....
@musicwhiz7113 жыл бұрын
this channel is dope!
@lyndseyanne40222 жыл бұрын
So someone else is logged into my account and they watch videos through the night. I always find videos I didnt watch and this is one of them. Im glad my hacker is using my account for education purposes though. These videos look interesting. Not sure why they dont just get their own account though?
@utilitymaxxing2 жыл бұрын
Slave labor as an inherent part of industrialization. Industrialization, capitalism, and colonialism being inseparable triplets. Is it worth it to have an industrialized society when the cost is so big? Industrialization was born out of slave labor, out of exploitation of people and resources. How can we progress to a healthier form that retains advancement but removes the exploitation treated as inherent to this system????? The Shakers are my favorite so far, as they exemplify many positive traits of industrialized society while eschewing negative ones. Maybe I just love small agrarian communities. But they prove we can have this innovation without uhhhhhhh slavery exploitation death destruction irreparable traumatic changes to ourselves and our environment (We are our environment and any harm caused to it is harm to ourselves.) Thanks for this lecture series though. Super informative. I am thriving. I know it's a good lecture series when I feel compelling to take notes.
@houstonsam616310 ай бұрын
Industrialism, capitalism, and colonialism enabled the western powers actually to end slavery in the west. Beginning with the Royal Navy but later including others such as the US, the Atlantic slave trade was ended by force, and slaving was then ended in the African colonies of the UK, precisely because of the superior technology and distinct recognition of humanity inherent in the culture of the UK, the English-speaking world, and the west. Yes, people have been exploited. Yes, that exploitation provided the labor needed to accomplish many of the advances made in the west. How can we progress to a healthier form? Exactly the way we have progressed - by recognizing that western values are fundamentally incompatible with slavery, by ending slavery, and by treating all people as individuals rather than as token representatives of ethnic groups that occupied relatively higher or lower positions on an earlier social hierarchy.
@SuperOlds88 Жыл бұрын
I wish the world was still 36 mph or less.
@awanderingprince3 жыл бұрын
"with music probably written by Kurt Vile" ahahahahahahahah
@HistoryofID3 жыл бұрын
No no, not a joke! That's Kurt Weill, German composer who came to the US in 1935. That he wrote music for an overview of the history of American locomotives is such a strange bit of history. And today's Kurt Vile's name is a happy coincidence for him!
@awanderingprince3 жыл бұрын
@@HistoryofID hahahaha amazing. learning even more now ha
@ShowandTellknitting3 жыл бұрын
If you ever heard the song Mack the Knife (Bobby Darin and Ella Fitzgerald famously jazzed it up) it's based on Kurt Weill's music for the 1928 play The Threepenny Opera by Bertolt Brecht.
@stache19543 жыл бұрын
Did you study ballet? That's quite a turnout you have!