Hair Thatching (1958)
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- Опубликовано: 8 фев 2025
- Long Wittenham in Berkshire (now Oxfordshire).
Man measures proportions of a dilapidated cottage - its windows are broken. Mr Roye England makes scale models of traditional English cottages that are ready for demolition or just falling to pieces. He is creating a model village.
Mr England is seen working on a model. He uses tweezers to move parts of his model. He uses fine sand from egg timers to represent soil, rubber sponge is used for ivy, card for the buildings, blackbird feathers are used for flowers etc.
Mr England's wife and Wynne Morris turn up and Mr England asks his wife to cut a chunk out of Morris's hair. This will be used in the model to represent thatched roofing.
Mr England has another project which is (surprise, surprise) a model railway. Another man - Guy Williams - is working on this project with him. Mr Williams gives the "thumbs up" signal to Mr England and he flicks a switch. Various shots of the model railway in operation.
FILM ID:83.04
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Guy Williams is my grandfather. Pendon is an amazing legacy to his and Roy's work
Guy Williams was legendary in the world of scratchbuilt model locomotives. He had an uncanny understanding of proportion and ability to translate complex measurements quickly into model form, and what he produced has only really been matched by the standard of etched kits over the last 25 years. In some cases he was able to build an engine to his standards quicker than using an available kit.
This is amazing, I would love to see more. I would have been 8 years old when this was made, and tv was a new thing ( only a few years) for us in Canada at the time !
✌️🇨🇦❤️
The loco looks better than most made today.
... today the work of Mr England and Mr Williams are known as Pendon Museum 😉
There after 2:38, "overall scale of the viaduct and train is one centimeter to the foot or one seventy-sixth of the actual size", that is a bit of an error: in real world dimensions a foot equals 30.4 cm instead of 76 cm; what does equal 1 foot in 1/76 scale is 4mm.