- Видео 45
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J Fisher
Добавлен 10 окт 2013
Bach Double Violin Concerto; arranged for two pianos. (slow movement)
Bach Double Violin Concerto; arranged for two pianos. (slow movement)
Просмотров: 137
Видео
Whitton church organ
Просмотров 3521 день назад
Rushworth & Dreaper reed organ installed in Whitton church, Tenbury
White Rotary treadle sewing machine - sewing!
Просмотров 17428 дней назад
Wasting time doing unimportant things with a White Rotary treadle sewing machine
White Rotary treadle sewing machine
Просмотров 24428 дней назад
Vintage treadle sewing machine by White
Vintage sewing machines - how to treadle
Просмотров 852Месяц назад
A few thoughts on learning to operate treadle sewing machines. Using a Singer 201
Rushworth & Dreaper Reed organ tremulant
Просмотров 1543 месяца назад
Demonstration of reed organ “beater” valve tremulant on Rushworth & Dreaper “Apollo” reed organ, after modifications to the original design.
Old treadle sewing machine first stitches
Просмотров 1,2 тыс.11 месяцев назад
Sewing after decades of neglect
1950s Singer 201k treadle sewing machine
Просмотров 40111 месяцев назад
A quick Look at a late treadle design by Singer.
Flag making on vintage Singer sewing machine
Просмотров 679Год назад
Making a Union Jack flag, the traditional way, on a vintage sewing machine. 66k
Singer Swiss Zig Zag attachment demonstration on vintage treadle sewing machine
Просмотров 2,1 тыс.Год назад
Demonstration of the "Swiss" Zig Zag attachment, on a vintage Singer 66k treadle sewing machine C.1914.
Singer 15K Sewing Machine, in treadle cabinet
Просмотров 3,4 тыс.2 года назад
Singer 15K Sewing Machine, in treadle cabinet
Buxtehude "Nun Komm, der Heiden Heiland"
Просмотров 1,1 тыс.4 года назад
Buxtehude "Nun Komm, der Heiden Heiland"
Bach Fugue on Rushworh & Dreaper pedal reed organ
Просмотров 6 тыс.4 года назад
Bach Fugue on Rushworh & Dreaper pedal reed organ
Rushworth & Dreaper Apollo organ, showing different stops in combination
Просмотров 3,9 тыс.7 лет назад
Rushworth & Dreaper Apollo organ, showing different stops in combination
A very specific use case but.... forced into sedentary duties as a clerk in Headquarters in the mid-80's, having the Regimental Sergeant Major (RSM) sign-off Part 1 Orders for the day, getting on this and making exactly 24 copies for each sub-Unit, Squadron and Department for them to post up on the P1O Board for everyone to see who was on Guard Duty for the next few days and what Regimental meetings were taking place - and any activities that everyone should know about in the local area, including the current security state. It's the smell that stays with you, forever - especially the Correctine fluid!
I just got one like this, my first machine
Clear. Simply communicated. Inspiring. Thank you. 👏👏👏
Excellent quilting machine…that cube looks like antique thread 🧵 wax for hand quilting the layers together pull the thread through the groves in the wax protects the thread and mades it slide better between layers of fabric..kool demo .
Whites is a very interesting rotary machine .rotary machine was very ahead of their time most machines of the time were just oscillating machines…rotary machines much faster sewing machines with a short rotary needles and a short stroke of needle bar ..whites free and singer was in a very heated competition in machine sales
Yes, I was very impressed with this mechanically… especially the transmission of rotary motion from the main shaft to the hook race via link and sliding block inside the arm. Very nicely done!
@ gear drive machines are slowed down by the friction of the grease between the worm gears sometimes the grease get dehydrated down to a wax and you can add a drop or two of motor oil to rehydrate the grease and it will help with the grease friction with other machines…baking soda from the kitchen will safely dissolve the old brown oils if you ever need to clean any parts
Yes, and if you’re using a machine with gear drives on a treadle, you really notice the extra resistance. I find the linkage driven machines much better for treadles, where ease of running and good momentum are (I think) more important than smoothness and lack of vibration…
Beautiful , it looks brand new and not used at all 😊
OMG! this was used back in the late 80s to early 90s in my elementary school
Nice arrangement of this piece of which you both have a good feeling for. I’ve used this Bach for a pre mass piece which works well on a two Manuel pipe organ. Well done good performance👍
Hi it’s good to see you again in here, I really enjoy the things you cover, I have a couple of vintage singer machines I enjoy using also being a musician I enjoy your reed organ, piano and gramophone explanations! Thank you for all these
Oh thank you 😊 the things are a bit random, but I’m glad someone enjoys them 👍
@ yup sure do! The random approach makes it very watchable!
Great video. Thank you
You’re welcome… can’t have too many sewing machine videos 😂
@ True that ha ha, especially vintage sewing machines!
That was great I was wondering how can I order a this accessory box with all the different stitches of zigzag. I would love to order one if you can put it on the commend section than you so much ❤❤❤❤❤❤🎉
This was a great video. Very informative. I recently ordered one, and had no idea it would be top feeding. That makes me feel like my purchase was way more valuable. I don't know if I'll find it useful, but it would be fun to learn to do zig zag well on my 15 or 201k.
who is the pianist? lovely sound! beautiful tone
Klingt wie ein altes Akkordeon.😢
Very great 👍. I am so glad that I found you here and I subscriebed you. I like this techniqe as an organ builder 😊. Kind regards Alex.
Don't know what I'm looking at but it looks fascinating. On my reed organ it is only a fan vox humana, which is quite a simple contraption.
It’s an attempt to improve a ‘beater’ valve tremulant in reed organs - I should have made a video comparing before and after.
@@jfisher6829 I'll be waiting for your next video.
Amazing😍
Wonderful
Utopia
The smell. The purply-blue ink left on our hands. The memories. Still used one of these when I started teaching music in a rural, far-western NSW (Australia) public school in 1989. I know copiers were around but they were still slow, not great quality and expensive. So most of the time, we made use of the ol' gestetner. I remember making many a template for pieces of music. It couldn't be typed as I needed to make the music lines first and write up the notes to play. The templates we made didn't last for too long. After they'd been through the machine a certain number of times, we had to remake these. For a number of regularly used pieces of music, I used to draw up everything on old (but clean) bedsheets. That way I could use them year after year. This worked better than using butcher's paper. I can't remember even having an overhead projector at this stage but surely I did? It wouldn't have been too convenient though as we would have needed to use several sheets for one piece of music. We couldn't exactly play the piece and stop every time we needed to put up the next page! In looking at this now, I'm surprised that the mechanism didn't include automated copying (ie electric). We had to hand-crank every copy. Is that odd or common?
What's still puzzling me after literally 40 years is how would you produce the master from an existing printed sheet
You wouldn’t. Masters had to be typed or hand drawn onto special master sheets. With modern technology, existing documents can be scanned and a master cut into thermal material and used as in the video.
@@jfisher6829 Plus, the originals were only useful for so many copies. You couldn't use them year after year with new classes. We needed to re-write the whole thing again to get a fresh, clearer new copy.
@@loverlymeyou might be thinking more of the ‘spirit’ duplicators, they used masters which held the copying ink actually on the master, and copies were fairly limited and quality became poorer the more copies you made. Gestetner masters are actually fairly durable, they are in effect just stencils and I think the number of copies produced from a master could run into the thousands…
I love this , but I sure wish you could share the smell of that old machine. lol
the primary school which I attended in the mid-90s used to have this machine. I can still remember the cranking sound it make as the man manually turns the hand crank to make photocopies of test papers. the outcome was not always clean, and sometimes one can see a bit of splattered ink here and there on the paper.
Buongiorno, sai dirmi di che anno e questa macchina . Grazie
Can you tell me what notes you where playing at 1:32? I like the Melody there a lot
I was did once a Internship in my local Bechstein store and it was pretty intressting to see how they sell Pianos but that grand have a nice and rich tone! Hope it´s still in tune and a playble condition
hmm I think I heard that piece somewhere once😊 beautiful playing! also nice how you activate the switch that make the keys play along I don´t know how you call it in english but in german you call it bass koppel (bass) and diskant Koppel (upper voice)
Ah! What a wonderful performance! Dear organist! I congratulate and wish you all the best to perform well in many stages, recording studios, orchestras, concert halls, theatres, schools, colleges, churches and wherever you are invited!
What a nice comment, thank you!
@@jfisher6829 Electronic keyboard contains electronically recorded and programmed circuit board of sound chips connected to speaker that imitates the sound of organ and all the other musical instruments but it can't beat the real organ and other musical instruments. Always the vibration of real music produced by blowing wind pressure on rank of reeds operated by bellows and keyboard in real organ is always the real one. No electronic imitation can beat nor replace it.
This is cool! I love pipe organs and this reed organ sounds nice. Is it using an electric vacuum pump?
Is this vacumn or pressure? & is it the only known example in existance? This is tonally far superior to the more common Rushworth & Dreaper Apollo Reed organ & is more equal to the Wright/Vocalion reed organs which are pressure.
my 5th grade teacher had one back in 89' or 90' he used blue ink.
Thank you. Well done. You did justice to this monumental fugue. I hope you keep up the good work!
Thanks for the tour of the inside of the organ with the music.
This wonderful video brought back memories. My partner Bruce Dracott asked me to post the following which may be of interest: The John Holt Reed Organ at Knowle. "We first met this splendid instrument some time in the later 1990s. It had had little or no attention for many years. Our brief was to make things work that didn’t work, and make things stop working that wouldn’t stop. Basically this meant overhauling the stop action, dealing with cyphers (as far as possible), putting silent reeds back on speech, and sorting out the winding. As you have probably heard in the recordings, quieting the pedal action was not part of the job! If this sounds fairly straightforward, remember that this is a mechanical action 3 M+P organ with all the reeds and action inside the console, so getting at almost any of the moving or speaking parts usually requires a lot of dismantling, including the beautiful case itself. We returned in spring 2001 to tune it up for its 75th anniversary recital. Tuning took two full days with a certain amount of (informed?) guesswork, mainly because of a 5C temperature rise between the first and second days. We made quite a good recording of the recital. The organ sounded and behaved very well in a truly punishing work-out covering music of many periods." Bruce and I are now blissfully retired in Finistère, Brittany.
Wonderful design, angled stop jambs , & narrow bottom half of the organ facilitating closer RCO ergonomic standards
Concerning tempo: most organists take the tempi too fast! Listen therefore to Albert Schweitzer 1935 and at the organ in Gunsbach (somewhat slower) and you shall hear that your tempo is quite o k !
Z means you're o k !
Z
I have a cabinet very similar to the one you are showing. I was able to raise the machine by pushing the button on the front but now can't seem to find the release mechanism to lower the machine. The button to raise the machine did not pop back out when the machine was raised. Any thoughts that might help?
I have the same problem. i need to know how to lower it too.
I love it. Very very good. 👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻😊❤❤👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻
I am attempting to learn to treadle...OMG it is NOT easy!
It is with practise. Start with the machine unthreaded, and practise treadling slowly, with just enough momentum to take the treadle over the dead centres.
I have a Singer 191J on a treadle, super powerful once you get comfy using it.
Love those old machines. Thank you for sharing.
you lucky to have one, you should restored this machine and used it if you are a bushcrafter or an outdoorsy tpye of person, or keep this a souvenir, as it s probably over 100 years old. and woth every penny in gold than the modern rubbish you find everywhere, and they still fetch a good price. it will last you your life time. thanks for posting. i grew with one .
Love the sound of this especially at lower/slow speeds. Make me want one now.
Nice to see it resurrected, there’s a little loop on the cover plate that the thread goes through on its way to the needle
Yes, there is… that bit was fine, but the take-up spring is a little deformed on this one.
The leather tab is to add in removing the bobbin drawer, the slide arm locks back on itself and prevent direct downward movement without unlocking, presumably by a upward motion. Think of how your elbows can support your weight when fully extended without using muscle strength by hyperextetending just a bit so the force is resting on the joint.
These streamlined treadles are extremely rare in my area. In fact, I've only seen one, ever. Coupled with a 201k, I would cheerfully paid a premium for it.
Now that is wonderfully quiet.
Is this available
I remember this machine, when I was in elementary school back in year 2006