Ships these days don’t hold a candle to what we used to build in the late 20th, early 21st century.. cruise ships these days are essentially a floating water park and hotel, and no one really cares about the destinations.. imo, everything you can do on a modern day cruise ship can be done a lot better on dry land.. hotels can be bigger, more restaurants options, water parks can be A LOT bigger etc.. Hell, only a VERY SMALL percentage of passengers disembark at each port of call.. most people just stay on the ship.. it’s a waste of resources.. cruise ships burn MASSIVE amounts of bunker/heavy fuel oil, and for what, so passenger can glance out into the open ocean every once in a while .. just get a hotel in Vegas ffs
I hope you eventually get to doing a second and third class tour, and definitely a crew areas tour. Those spaces are what I want to see most, as they comprised of a majority of Titanic’s ability to properly function as a liner. Good video as always Mike!
I've seen a lot of photos of the third class accommodations, and I actually prefer the aesthetic for the most part. It feels a little friendlier, less sterile. First class was beautiful but it always has that museum feel to it. Third class, in particular the reception rooms, just had that kind of "worn-in furniture" feel that made it very inviting. Of course, I say this as someone who could only ever afford a third-class ticket.
I'm not being facetious, you know how a new car has a new car smell, I bet Titanic had a new ship smell. All those brand-new wool carpets, the new wood and tiles for the floors, fresh paint and wallpaper. Then on top of that, everything being a first. She was very pretty, especially if you could afford 1st class. The end of the ship is so sad, there she is on the ocean floor, still on her maiden voyage.
If you ever want to get a slight feel of what it might have been on Titanic first class stay a few nights at The Grand Hotel on Mackinaw Island in Michigan. I just took my father for a few days as a bucket list wish. You MUST wear formal clothing for the five course dinner and if you want to walk around the hotel after 6:30 pm you need to be in formal wear. Men must wear a suit jacket and tie, women must wear dresses. It really gives you a feeling of stepping back in time. Also, there are no cars allowed on the island except an ambulance, fire truck, and a police car. It was a lot of fun (not so much for little children).
As an amateur Titanic 'expert', I can't believe how much, featured in this wonderful video, I didn't know about. Invaluable gems of knowledge to add to my study of this beautiful ship. Thank you.
I worked for a physical therapist in the 1980s and he had a version of the back rubbing machine. The top had a hole in it and it moved over an exposed padded cylinder. Patients would fall asleep on it. It was heavenly.
i have adhd and have hyperfixated on the titanic time and time again since i was little. i downloaded demo 401 after seeing your first video about it, Mike, even though i knew my gaming laptop would probably overheat. worth it. it's truly such a beautiful experience it brought tears to my eyes, i even ran to my mum so i could show her too and she loved it just as much. titanic h&g did an incredible job, thank you team titanic h&g for such a beautiful recreation. i know my 8 year old self would be kicking her lil feet in excitement if she knew about it < 3
I think I must have read Ballard’s book on finding Titanic hundreds of times all through the 90’s. I think it was my brother’s but I could absolutely not get enough, ever.
@@hurtfulhoney You NEED the book On A Sea Of Glass about Titanic. It's so hard to put it down once you start. And just as fun to read the chapters all over again.
The detail is amazing. The light, shadow, shading, especially the rendering. It's absolute realistic perfection. The effort involved can only be the sheer love of the job.
Thank you for your amazing creativity which allows us to travel back in time to experience what life on the Titanic might have been like. Even though Titanic represents so much loss and tragedy, there was still beauty and you allow us to be a part of the beauty.
In the Turkish baths, the electric bathtub would be a treatment where someone would lie down in it and the body was 'charged' with direct or electrostatic energy and then later 'drained'. It would cause the body to warm and sweat and raise the pulse. It was a relatively painless process. No water was involved with these units.
Mike Brady, you've done it again with another exemplary presentation of one of my favorite ships. You certainly have become our expert go to when it comes to Ocean Liners. Your narrative style, and choice of graphic presentations leaves nothing, and everything to the imagination. Greetings from San Jose, California (Silicon Valley)
Every time I see a new video like this, it amazes me how beautiful Titanic was, but then it makes me sad knowing that ALL of this is at the bottom of the ocean.
And also sad that it's basicaly identical twin, Olympic, at the end of it's carreer in the 1930's, was deemed just a used up old ship and torn apart for scrap...
After watching "Titanic" and later on "Revolutionary Road" I hope that Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio will make a third movie together; that hopefully ends with neither of their characters losing their lives. What makes me smile is how Kate and Leo have had a strong friendship ever since they first met on the set of "Titanic." When Kate's second marriage to director Sam Mendes crumbled Leo cleared his schedule and stepped up to the plate to help Kate with her children Mia and Joe. In fact Kate's kids love Leo so much they call him "Uncle Leo."
Mike Brady is my go to person on RUclips whenever I need to fall asleep. I just browse any of his contents on his channel and voila goodbye world see you in my dreams. He speaks very calmly and relaxed. His voice is so soothing to the ears and makes me fall asleep easily hehehe. And whenever I get that full hours of sleep, I rewatched again the entire clip of his contents ofcourse because I am also a Titanic fanatic. Thanks Mike for all of your educational and entertaining videos. Keep it up! All the best. ❤❤❤
Never get tired of watching Titanic videos. The Grand Staircase was work of genius art. Beautiful. Wish that some of it had been saved. Great video, really enjoyed it. Thank you.❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂
This is incredible. I wish so much that I could walk through the real Titanic (minus the whole sinking part, of course!). It'd be great to see a second, third class, or crew tour as well, if and when these spaces become available.
Hi Mike, I'm afraid I'm going to keep lobbying you for a worthy account of the sinking of HMT Lancastria. This appalling tragedy needs a wider audience.
Electric baths still exist in Japan. It's called a denkiburo 電気風呂. It's basically a pool of warm water with a very weak electric current running through it. The effect is not different from an EMS massager. The current stimulates the muscles. It's quite relaxing 😊
22:57 is repeated again at 28:11; not sure if that was made on purpose, but I had to take a double take because I thought maybe I accidentally replayed it myself...
@@Phaaschh It is, and the food they serve is superb too. I stopped by on my way to a race at Knockhill once and on the way back stopped in again after visiting the Jim Clark museum in Duns. That was a memorable weekend.
Matt’s knowledge is invaluable and I love his insights regarding the slightest details. I think if he spoke with more confidence and finished his thoughts without interrupting himself it would make his points even stronger and easier to follow. Dude is the king of tangential thinking. 😅
kislux You are so well-informed about luxury accessories and bags. You've obviously done your due diligence and the comparison to the US is very informative...because of course, I live in New York. thank you very much.
Your presentations are all so well done. I have to say that anything on the Titanic is the most fascinating, I guess because it’s the most famous ship in history, and the attachment we have due to the films and documentaries. I also think your presentations are excellent, partly for the respect you have for your work and your audience by the way you make the effort to dress in your best (and are prepared to go down like a gentleman! Ha ha).
Big Titanic fan here.I heard that James Cameron used actual blueprints to build the grand stare case when they sunk the tank.The staircases lifted up in the water.
Always love to see your uploads Mike! Tasting history has a great few videos with recipes from the first, second, and third class if you haven’t seen it!
As beautiful as the First Class staterooms and public spaces were (and they were truly breathtaking), I had never before seen the A La Carte Restaurant illustrated so beautifully, as what TH&G has created here. And I think it may have become my favorite space onboard. But ask me again tomorrow…😁❤
Lusitania was quite luxurious, where second class was equivalent of first class on lesser ships and even third class was equal to second class of lesser ships, to the point of even having wood paneling.
Your channel is fantastic. I would love to see a video covering the white ship (Henry I) - clearly the Titanic of it’s time, and although not an ocean liner per se, the impact from its sinking was huge. Anyone into maritime history would love to hear you talk about this.
Always love your videos. It's amazing how much content this one ship can produce... It'd be cool to go on a tour of the different dining accommodations, and what each class of passenger would have expected to be eating while onboard.
I saw in some extras in a Titanic 4 disc dvd set that they had to make the grand staircase BIGGER (20% I think) than the real one when they made the movie 🤯😁 I would LOVE to walk through this in VR! 🤩🤩
It’s so great that a digital version of the ship has been made. I think it would be cool with cities in a certain era or historic cities but I know some info isn’t fully known with some
I love these. Have you ever played Titanic: Adventure Out of Time? An old Point and Click mystery game where you need to take notes while you're playing. Would love to see you stream that sometime.
I find those images captivating, yet they also serve as a poignant reminder that regardless of our wealth or poverty, death is an inevitable and inescapable reality that awaits us all. It is a humbling thought to consider ourselves as food for other organisms.
The comment, "...this was all done with paper plans..." reminds me of myself in another context. I have the same wonder about older books that were written before computers, especially before there were even typewriters. I'm current re-reading Jane Austen's work and I try to imagine how she wrote an entire novel by hand. Of course there were probably scratch-outs for a word here or there but... what happens when she decides to change a whole segment of it...? And each story is so clever, with many sub text and side stories, all fitting into the same theme. It's no wonder it took years to write each novel. With the plans of any building at that time, it must have begun with a rough drawing that was gradually honed into finer detail until it was a draft. Being a draftsman was a very difficult job. But, you know, I can read hundreds of pages of a novel pre-1950 and not find one typo. I think I found one in the Lord of the Rings trilogy-- the set. None in either The Fountainhead or Atlas Shrugged. Yet if you pick a novel that was written today? Please. It's embarrassing. One cannot get through a single chapter without at least one or two typos, poor grammar or bad punctuation. My point is, things were harder in the old days and perhaps because of that, they did a better job, in both building and writing. I think, in the end, experience made all the difference.
Experience and education, which was infinitely more thorough up until comparatively recently. Technology has made a vast amount of teaching superfluous. I was taught technical drawing at school, something which is now almost unnecessary with the advent of CAD. But I'm very glad that I did, because it taught me to think in 3 dimensions. Likewise, standards of English language teaching have fallen catastrophically. In the age where "everyone wins a prize", ironically, everyone loses. They just don't realise it.
When publishing got big, even with daily newspapers, there were a few stages of editing, where separate people who specialized in catching grammatical mistakes & spelling errors, who would go over the same piece of writing, whether an article or book, to check for mistakes. There was enough money in publishing to afford the involvement of so many people.
The published editions aren't just for show. When you read something more than half a century later, it has gone through revisions and had errors fixed over a great amount of time. Lord of the Rings is a good example for this, as when it came to some of Tolkien's works, later revisions changed nouns around to suit the sensibilities of the author. If you're interested, there is an annotated edition of The Hobbit that tracks alterations between versions, including changing tomatoes to potatoes, etc, in various passages.
I would also add to these fine comments , that this was all done before WWI , meaning many of those craftsmen all across Europe would shortly after vanish or get gravely injured and traumatized. the sharp drop in craftsmanship even in architecture after WWI is unfortunately very remarkable in the most negative sense. then we could add , that this was all done long before radio and most importantly TV - the slow but ever constant poison of society , which would not over night , but over decades in conjunction with the detrimental abolishment of the Hay's Code , lead to the rise of all these anti-social youth culture movements - from punk rock to later heavy metal and gangsta rap. i know i am sounding like a Grandpa right now , but just image a world before the two worst industrial age wars , before TV and all this destructive movies , all this swearing , negativity and cynicism young people are brought up and babysit in today , as latch-key kids. people back then had little trauma outside of corporal punishment in public schools , little diversions / attention thievery going on. everyone back then was basically locked on / focused in on their work. labor laws also were far away from the 40 h work week i imagine. which meant that people spent more time honing their craft. in a way an incredible time period most certainly , which i would like to visit by time machine just for a quick immersive check in on the manners and respectfulness and general atmosphere of that era.
Thats a so freaking great 3D creation. I hope it will get some updates.... like the missing rest of the Ship... and of course an Outside tour as well! (I would pay for that! And it was free. It was like Christmas. For a Titanic Fan.) So Mike... pls encourage the developer at least for a featuer to show the ship from the outside. Its fairly simple but for Modell builder as important as the highly detailed interiör. Such an awsome Work so far.
Hello Mike Brady I love your videos so much I watch them every day and I have a titanic picture from you and my dad has been slacking to much to get a frame for it your very inspiring and I'm even building a Titanic model and your my bestie you just don't know it yet!
Hey Mike! Loving the videos. I’ve been really interested in the Lego Titanic recently. I watched some reviews and noticed some inaccuracies. Could you make a video reviewing it and seeing how accurate it is?
I have the set and for what it is its pretty good. Main issues are the windows are just sort of random, there is a flag on the bow and second class entrance on the stern is too large. The cables on the masts arent the best and i also doubt the interior lines up perfectly however for what it is it makes a stunning display if you have the space and the external issues are pretty easy to fix if you wish to do so. Hope this helps
Honor and Glory guys crack me up, Your astonished how they drew up everything on paper without computers, well I’m astonished with your amazingly detailed 3D recreation using computers😱 that makes my brain hurt😂😂
Compass error: We used to determine (not correct) compass error by first take a bearing on known object to determine true bearing, usually sun at sunrise and sunset. Compare true bearing to compass bearing and calculate compass error and allow for it to plot a true course. We didn't correct compasses, we calculated the error and allowed for it.
If you are impressed with the woodcarving here, I saw a RUclips video of artists in India sitting on the ground, their work gripped by hand and foot. Their work was comparable in quality to this. That's truly backbreaking work.
Interesting video, I can remember around 25 years ago having some software thing for my computer with a tour. We all know this wouldn't be of interest except for the sinking. What always strikes me is the almost claustrophobic low ceilings. We haven't an equivalent in risky travel today to compare with North Atlantic ships.
I never get tired of looking at these beautiful re-creations
Neither do I!
Ships these days don’t hold a candle to what we used to build in the late 20th, early 21st century.. cruise ships these days are essentially a floating water park and hotel, and no one really cares about the destinations.. imo, everything you can do on a modern day cruise ship can be done a lot better on dry land.. hotels can be bigger, more restaurants options, water parks can be A LOT bigger etc..
Hell, only a VERY SMALL percentage of passengers disembark at each port of call.. most people just stay on the ship.. it’s a waste of resources.. cruise ships burn MASSIVE amounts of bunker/heavy fuel oil, and for what, so passenger can glance out into the open ocean every once in a while .. just get a hotel in Vegas ffs
The people who made the re-creation of the Titanic in 3D did such a great job. it looks so real.
I hope you eventually get to doing a second and third class tour, and definitely a crew areas tour. Those spaces are what I want to see most, as they comprised of a majority of Titanic’s ability to properly function as a liner. Good video as always Mike!
I too would love to see second class cabins! Also, Captain Smith's and the senior officers' quarters.
Well third class was basically just wooden benches.
I've seen a lot of photos of the third class accommodations, and I actually prefer the aesthetic for the most part. It feels a little friendlier, less sterile. First class was beautiful but it always has that museum feel to it. Third class, in particular the reception rooms, just had that kind of "worn-in furniture" feel that made it very inviting.
Of course, I say this as someone who could only ever afford a third-class ticket.
I probably know the least about second class. I want to see more!
Guys its our friend Mike Brady from Oceanliner Designs!
I thought it was his cousin, Mick Bradley of Cruiseliner Illustrations
@@plum_bit Nah man I thought it was his Uncle Micah Brandon from Warship Blueprints.
The one and only
@@TheGrinch384 me personally I thought it was his twice removed nephew Mekiel Bardly from Steamship Drawings
I thought it was his distant 3rd cousin Micheal Brooke From Paddlesteamer Sketches
4:20 through 5:30 our boy transcended space and time through this speech
i thought there was something wrong with my browser, i was so close to switching to firefox! this needed a warning!
2 Titanic videos in one week? Awesome!
the exquisite quality pre-plastic world.
The electric bath is terrifying. But that cage shower seems like it would be AMAZING
I'm not being facetious, you know how a new car has a new car smell, I bet Titanic had a new ship smell. All those brand-new wool carpets, the new wood and tiles for the floors, fresh paint and wallpaper. Then on top of that, everything being a first. She was very pretty, especially if you could afford 1st class. The end of the ship is so sad, there she is on the ocean floor, still on her maiden voyage.
People could still smell the paint
The paint was still so fresh in some places that it actually made people dizzy.
If you ever want to get a slight feel of what it might have been on Titanic first class stay a few nights at The Grand Hotel on Mackinaw Island in Michigan. I just took my father for a few days as a bucket list wish. You MUST wear formal clothing for the five course dinner and if you want to walk around the hotel after 6:30 pm you need to be in formal wear. Men must wear a suit jacket and tie, women must wear dresses. It really gives you a feeling of stepping back in time. Also, there are no cars allowed on the island except an ambulance, fire truck, and a police car. It was a lot of fun (not so much for little children).
My kind of place ! Shoes my age lol 😂
As an amateur Titanic 'expert', I can't believe how much, featured in this wonderful video, I didn't know about. Invaluable gems of knowledge to add to my study of this beautiful ship. Thank you.
I worked for a physical therapist in the 1980s and he had a version of the back rubbing machine. The top had a hole in it and it moved over an exposed padded cylinder. Patients would fall asleep on it. It was heavenly.
i have adhd and have hyperfixated on the titanic time and time again since i was little. i downloaded demo 401 after seeing your first video about it, Mike, even though i knew my gaming laptop would probably overheat. worth it. it's truly such a beautiful experience it brought tears to my eyes, i even ran to my mum so i could show her too and she loved it just as much. titanic h&g did an incredible job, thank you team titanic h&g for such a beautiful recreation. i know my 8 year old self would be kicking her lil feet in excitement if she knew about it < 3
It’s been my hyper fixation for most my life too and at 32 I still squeal like the little 6 year old girl who got a book on titanic for Christmas 😂
@@rebeccakinney6357 i’m glad it isn’t just me ! it’s such a beautiful tragedy i always find myself drawn to it periodically
I think I must have read Ballard’s book on finding Titanic hundreds of times all through the 90’s. I think it was my brother’s but I could absolutely not get enough, ever.
@@jackdaw99 i might need to start investing in some titanic literature, sometimes it would be nice to sit in a dimly lit room reading all about her
@@hurtfulhoney You NEED the book On A Sea Of Glass about Titanic. It's so hard to put it down once you start. And just as fun to read the chapters all over again.
The detail is amazing. The light, shadow, shading, especially the rendering. It's absolute realistic perfection. The effort involved can only be the sheer love of the job.
An epic piece of Art , how sad that it was lost forever and that people lost their lives in this magnificent ship !
Thank you for your amazing creativity which allows us to travel back in time to experience what life on the Titanic might have been like. Even though Titanic represents so much loss and tragedy, there was still beauty and you allow us to be a part of the beauty.
4:40 That Melbourne cold brew kicked in and had our friend Mike Brady from Oceanliner Designs tweaking haaarrdd
This would make for an amazing, immersive, VR experience.
I would buy a VR headset if Titanic Honor & Glory comes out in VR.
In the Turkish baths, the electric bathtub would be a treatment where someone would lie down in it and the body was 'charged' with direct or electrostatic energy and then later 'drained'. It would cause the body to warm and sweat and raise the pulse. It was a relatively painless process. No water was involved with these units.
I never knew that passengers couldn't lock their rooms from the outside and didnt have keys. I never thought about it. Fascinating!
Mike Brady, you've done it again with another exemplary presentation of one of my favorite ships. You certainly have become our expert go to when it comes to Ocean Liners. Your narrative style, and choice of graphic presentations leaves nothing, and everything to the imagination. Greetings from San Jose, California (Silicon Valley)
it's not my favourite ship don't speak for me thx
@@eroero830 The way Americans speak to each other these days is so disrespectful.
@@eroero830hush yourself
Recently downloaded Demo 401 and absolutely blown away at the detail and pure realism. Thank you for the extra bits of info!
Every time I see a new video like this, it amazes me how beautiful Titanic was, but then it makes me sad knowing that ALL of this is at the bottom of the ocean.
And also sad that it's basicaly identical twin, Olympic, at the end of it's carreer in the 1930's, was deemed just a used up old ship and torn apart for scrap...
Your video's are amazing and point on. Every single story on the Titanic. BTW the pool is still full.
Looking down at Third class reminded of the movie. Because Rose Loved Jack❤
After watching "Titanic" and later on "Revolutionary Road" I hope that Kate Winslet and Leonardo DiCaprio will make a third movie together; that hopefully ends with neither of their characters losing their lives. What makes me smile is how Kate and Leo have had a strong friendship ever since they first met on the set of "Titanic." When Kate's second marriage to director Sam Mendes crumbled Leo cleared his schedule and stepped up to the plate to help Kate with her children Mia and Joe. In fact Kate's kids love Leo so much they call him "Uncle Leo."
This was awesome, Mike . The first class on Titanic was certainly beautiful . Thank you so much for this .
I spy an edited live stream lol. Thanks for condensing it and fixing that audio lag problem they had!
Mike Brady is my go to person on RUclips whenever I need to fall asleep. I just browse any of his contents on his channel and voila goodbye world see you in my dreams. He speaks very calmly and relaxed. His voice is so soothing to the ears and makes me fall asleep easily hehehe. And whenever I get that full hours of sleep, I rewatched again the entire clip of his contents ofcourse because I am also a Titanic fanatic. Thanks Mike for all of your educational and entertaining videos. Keep it up! All the best. ❤❤❤
Keep up the amazing work Mike!
Love your videos! There’re such a niche but I can’t get enough it’s so fascinating, thank you Mike Brady for these videos.
Never get tired of watching Titanic videos. The Grand Staircase was work of genius art. Beautiful. Wish that some of it had been saved. Great video, really enjoyed it. Thank you.❤❤❤❤❤❤❤😂
Hey it's our friend, Mike Brady. You know, the one from Ocean liner designs!
Hello Mike Brady from Oceanliner Designs, it’s your friends, ladies & gentlemen
😆👌
These recreations are absolutely incredible i feel like im walking the decks for real .
My favorite first class space aboard the RMS Titanic will always be the Smoke Room. I'm also a huge fan of the Squash court.
Thank you for another engaging and educational video.
I really enjoy how enthusiastic you are about sharing your love and knowledge of these grand liners.
just got into your channel and i’m obsessed! this is amazing, thank you for this opportunity!
The look of this game is so good, it feels like a google street view inside the ship. Its incredible
real ones already watched the livestream, but I will watch it again!
This is incredible. I wish so much that I could walk through the real Titanic (minus the whole sinking part, of course!). It'd be great to see a second, third class, or crew tour as well, if and when these spaces become available.
Another great video from our friend, Mike Brady from Oceanliner Designs
I deeply appreciate all of your hard work with giving so much great detail to your videos. You are my favorite go-to guy for anything Titanic!
Immaculate timing Mike, I've just finished work and this is exactly what I needed!! I love your videos so much !!
Hi Mike, I'm afraid I'm going to keep lobbying you for a worthy account of the sinking of HMT Lancastria. This appalling tragedy needs a wider audience.
I must admit that while this is a very well produced and narrated video, I would like to see something like these videos about the Normandie.
Another outstanding presentation, Mike! Thanks for all your work!
Electric baths still exist in Japan. It's called a denkiburo 電気風呂. It's basically a pool of warm water with a very weak electric current running through it. The effect is not different from an EMS massager. The current stimulates the muscles. It's quite relaxing 😊
Wonderful tour and information. I love this channel so much!
Yay! Excited to listen. Hope you are well!
22:57 is repeated again at 28:11; not sure if that was made on purpose, but I had to take a double take because I thought maybe I accidentally replayed it myself...
Thank you for the tour!! It’s amazing to see it and to immerse yourself into the mindset of how these spaces are created and utilized!! 🎉
Another fire video, and another fire outfit 🔥
Mike Brady always looks so dapper in his outfits.
Have you been to the White Swan Hotel in Alnwick? There are many features from the Olympic in the lounge. It's a beautiful place to sit.
It is an absolute delight, isn't it? Certainly a unique selling point.
@@Phaaschh It is, and the food they serve is superb too. I stopped by on my way to a race at Knockhill once and on the way back stopped in again after visiting the Jim Clark museum in Duns. That was a memorable weekend.
He still needs to visit apparently
Matt’s knowledge is invaluable and I love his insights regarding the slightest details. I think if he spoke with more confidence and finished his thoughts without interrupting himself it would make his points even stronger and easier to follow. Dude is the king of tangential thinking. 😅
kislux You are so well-informed about luxury accessories and bags. You've obviously done your due diligence and the comparison to the US is very informative...because of course, I live in New York. thank you very much.
I can watch these for hours and not get bored
This is so unbelievably realistic, you'd think you're actually there. Technology is incredible ❤️
Your presentations are all so well done. I have to say that anything on the Titanic is the most fascinating, I guess because it’s the most famous ship in history, and the attachment we have due to the films and documentaries.
I also think your presentations are excellent, partly for the respect you have for your work and your audience by the way you make the effort to dress in your best (and are prepared to go down like a gentleman! Ha ha).
Big Titanic fan here.I heard that James Cameron used actual blueprints to build the grand stare case when they sunk the tank.The staircases lifted up in the water.
Always love to see your uploads Mike! Tasting history has a great few videos with recipes from the first, second, and third class if you haven’t seen it!
So glad to hear!
This was perfect. Go to lunch at work and see this video pop up just in time! Stellar content every time Mike!
As beautiful as the First Class staterooms and public spaces were (and they were truly breathtaking), I had never before seen the A La Carte Restaurant illustrated so beautifully, as what TH&G has created here. And I think it may have become my favorite space onboard.
But ask me again tomorrow…😁❤
I hope you make more content like this with the boys in the future, this is really simple but enjoyable to watch
That was all great. Showing us the first class luxurious accommodations. Now let’s see the third class or steerage not so luxurious accommodations.
Lusitania was quite luxurious, where second class was equivalent of first class on lesser ships and even third class was equal to second class of lesser ships, to the point of even having wood paneling.
Wow! This is fantastic! Thank you for posting this!
Great recreation of the painting.
Man, I would really dig a huge uncut stream. Like 6 hours of just listening to you guys talk about every nook and cranny and little tidbit of info.
Wow Mike! Agreed...that was awesome...loved listening to the chat...thank you!
If I ever feel lonely there‘s my friend Mike Brady. Wholesome.
Same. He makes you feel welcome and appreciated
This is gonna be great inspiration for my 1:1 recreation of the Sierra Madre Resort & Casino in Minecraft.
My mom bought one kislux and she loves it. It had been there for over 10 years when she went out with it.
Hi, I am thrilled about this channel! so, well done and I'm binging. Liked and subbed. Found you through Tasting History, with Max Miller!😊
Your channel is fantastic. I would love to see a video covering the white ship (Henry I) - clearly the Titanic of it’s time, and although not an ocean liner per se, the impact from its sinking was huge. Anyone into maritime history would love to hear you talk about this.
Always love your videos. It's amazing how much content this one ship can produce... It'd be cool to go on a tour of the different dining accommodations, and what each class of passenger would have expected to be eating while onboard.
Beautiful work on the animation. I wish I could have seen the inside of the ship when she was in port.
I saw in some extras in a Titanic 4 disc dvd set that they had to make the grand staircase BIGGER (20% I think) than the real one when they made the movie 🤯😁
I would LOVE to walk through this in VR! 🤩🤩
Wow! So interesting. Really loved the details 👌
It’s so great that a digital version of the ship has been made. I think it would be cool with cities in a certain era or historic cities but I know some info isn’t fully known with some
Another lovely video! ,you should make a video about the arctic and her designs and features:) keep up the good work!
Alas .First Class! A cheerful hello to our First Class Friend Mike Brady.👌From The Friends of Mike Brady Society 🤗🙏😇
Would LOVE 2nd & 3rd class too, if possible.
I love these.
Have you ever played Titanic: Adventure Out of Time? An old Point and Click mystery game where you need to take notes while you're playing. Would love to see you stream that sometime.
Fantastic details and colors. The Kronprinzessin Cecilie (1906) had more lavish interiors designed by Werkbund artisans.
These guys from thg do some incredable work keep it up
23:00, enjoying the culture clash of Americans describing what "buffet" means here LOL
You're spoiling us, Mike!
Thank Mike, another awesome and informative video!!
I find those images captivating, yet they also serve as a poignant reminder that regardless of our wealth or poverty, death is an inevitable and inescapable reality that awaits us all. It is a humbling thought to consider ourselves as food for other organisms.
The comment, "...this was all done with paper plans..." reminds me of myself in another context. I have the same wonder about older books that were written before computers, especially before there were even typewriters. I'm current re-reading Jane Austen's work and I try to imagine how she wrote an entire novel by hand. Of course there were probably scratch-outs for a word here or there but... what happens when she decides to change a whole segment of it...? And each story is so clever, with many sub text and side stories, all fitting into the same theme. It's no wonder it took years to write each novel.
With the plans of any building at that time, it must have begun with a rough drawing that was gradually honed into finer detail until it was a draft. Being a draftsman was a very difficult job.
But, you know, I can read hundreds of pages of a novel pre-1950 and not find one typo. I think I found one in the Lord of the Rings trilogy-- the set. None in either The Fountainhead or Atlas Shrugged. Yet if you pick a novel that was written today? Please. It's embarrassing. One cannot get through a single chapter without at least one or two typos, poor grammar or bad punctuation. My point is, things were harder in the old days and perhaps because of that, they did a better job, in both building and writing.
I think, in the end, experience made all the difference.
Experience and education, which was infinitely more thorough up until comparatively recently. Technology has made a vast amount of teaching superfluous. I was taught technical drawing at school, something which is now almost unnecessary with the advent of CAD. But I'm very glad that I did, because it taught me to think in 3 dimensions. Likewise, standards of English language teaching have fallen catastrophically. In the age where "everyone wins a prize", ironically, everyone loses. They just don't realise it.
When publishing got big, even with daily newspapers, there were a few stages of editing, where separate people who specialized in catching grammatical mistakes & spelling errors, who would go over the same piece of writing, whether an article or book, to check for mistakes. There was enough money in publishing to afford the involvement of so many people.
The published editions aren't just for show. When you read something more than half a century later, it has gone through revisions and had errors fixed over a great amount of time. Lord of the Rings is a good example for this, as when it came to some of Tolkien's works, later revisions changed nouns around to suit the sensibilities of the author. If you're interested, there is an annotated edition of The Hobbit that tracks alterations between versions, including changing tomatoes to potatoes, etc, in various passages.
I would also add to these fine comments , that this was all done before WWI , meaning many of those craftsmen all across Europe would shortly after vanish or get gravely injured and traumatized.
the sharp drop in craftsmanship even in architecture after WWI is unfortunately very remarkable in the most negative sense.
then we could add , that this was all done long before radio and most importantly TV - the slow but ever constant poison of society , which would not over night , but over decades in conjunction with the detrimental abolishment of the Hay's Code , lead to the rise of all these anti-social youth culture movements - from punk rock to later heavy metal and gangsta rap.
i know i am sounding like a Grandpa right now , but just image a world before the two worst industrial age wars , before TV and all this destructive movies , all this swearing , negativity and cynicism young people are brought up and babysit in today , as latch-key kids.
people back then had little trauma outside of corporal punishment in public schools , little diversions / attention thievery going on.
everyone back then was basically locked on / focused in on their work.
labor laws also were far away from the 40 h work week i imagine. which meant that people spent more time honing their craft.
in a way an incredible time period most certainly , which i would like to visit by time machine just for a quick immersive check in on the manners and respectfulness and general atmosphere of that era.
Thats a so freaking great 3D creation. I hope it will get some updates.... like the missing rest of the Ship... and of course an Outside tour as well! (I would pay for that! And it was free. It was like Christmas. For a Titanic Fan.)
So Mike... pls encourage the developer at least for a featuer to show the ship from the outside. Its fairly simple but for Modell builder as important as the highly detailed interiör. Such an awsome Work so far.
Hello Mike Brady I love your videos so much I watch them every day and I have a titanic picture from you and my dad has been slacking to much to get a frame for it your very inspiring and I'm even building a Titanic model and your my bestie you just don't know it yet!
Our good friend Mike Brady, from Oceanliner Designs!
not MY friend.
Hey Mike! Loving the videos. I’ve been really interested in the Lego Titanic recently. I watched some reviews and noticed some inaccuracies. Could you make a video reviewing it and seeing how accurate it is?
I have the set and for what it is its pretty good. Main issues are the windows are just sort of random, there is a flag on the bow and second class entrance on the stern is too large. The cables on the masts arent the best and i also doubt the interior lines up perfectly however for what it is it makes a stunning display if you have the space and the external issues are pretty easy to fix if you wish to do so. Hope this helps
🎉 How lovely.
Honor and Glory guys crack me up,
Your astonished how they drew up everything on paper without computers, well I’m astonished with your amazingly detailed 3D recreation using computers😱 that makes my brain hurt😂😂
Excelente 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👌🏻🚢
Compass error: We used to determine (not correct) compass error by first take a bearing on known object to determine true bearing, usually sun at sunrise and sunset. Compare true bearing to compass bearing and calculate compass error and allow for it to plot a true course. We didn't correct compasses, we calculated the error and allowed for it.
If you are impressed with the woodcarving here, I saw a RUclips video of artists in India sitting on the ground, their work gripped by hand and foot. Their work was comparable in quality to this.
That's truly backbreaking work.
Interesting video, I can remember around 25 years ago having some software thing for my computer with a tour. We all know this wouldn't be of interest except for the sinking. What always strikes me is the almost claustrophobic low ceilings. We haven't an equivalent in risky travel today to compare with North Atlantic ships.