1. Proposal 2. Invitation to factory 3. Record 4. Edit 5. Profit. Now, make a narrative story out of these, and you got yourself a How it's made: "How it's made episodes". Available on Disney channel.
It is just amazing how cotton is processed. We really should appreciate all our clothes and linens and they are rather cheap considering all the labor involved. Let us be thankful.
More importantly, let us be thankful for the fossil fuels that run all of that machinery. I hear the old method for processing cotton was labor intensive and not very nice for the workers.
When my kiddos were young, I grew this indoors to show my kids what it looked liked, it's a fun project, and they can harvest the seeds in the cotton fluffs and grow more.
I’ve always thought of how incredible it is that people invent the machines that do all this stuff. To me it seems you have to be borderline genius to come up with, and build, machines like that.
Yeah it's fascinating. I have a ton of respect for the dudes who make it happen. They're responsible for most of our modern wealth. Creating with 10 people what it would take 1,000+ to do otherwise. Amazing.
Some of my fondest memories are of my aunt (who was only a couple of years older than me) and I running around playing hide and seek in the cotton fields here in Mississippi in the late 80s-early 90s. My stepdad and grandfather were cotton farmers.
Really amazing how many specialized machines take the raw cotton and through multiple steps, cleans the cotton. I had no idea that cotton seed can be used as feed for animals.
@@guillermobarroso2990 Indeed, remains of oil and corn productions are also other interesting sources of livestock feed. If it food grade and humans don't wants to eat it by the masses, assume it's ends in the mouths of animals. Whether that's your steaks, pork, chickens, etc or your pets' like cats, dogs, fish, etc.
i work at a processing plant for cottonseed we make oil and feed from the cottonseed it pretty neat to see this part of the processing even seeing some of the equipment we have on this video is pretty cool
I didn't realize how humorous cottonseed oil could be until Arnold's cousin Arnie read the ingredients on a bag of peanuts in a "Hey Arnold" episode. "Peanuts, cottonseed oil, salt."
First, they take the dinglebop, and they smooth it out with a bunch of schleem. The schleem is then repurposed for later batches. They take the dinglebop and they push it through the grumbo, where the fleeb is rubbed against it. It’s important that the fleeb is rubbed, because the fleeb has all of the fleeb juice. Then a schlami shows up, and he rubs it and spits on it. They cut the fleeb. There’s several hizzards in the way. The blamfs rub against the chumbles. And the ploobis and grumbo are shaved away. That leaves you with a regular old plumbus.
Lou Fazio people like you rarely ever go anywhere in life 😂 you’ll probably end up joining the military or law enforcement since nothing else has ever worked for you.
The naturally occurring cotton colors are shades of green, tan, brown, and reddish brown. Don’t confuse naturally colored cotton with organic cotton. Organic cotton is any cotton that has been raised with non-GMO seed without chemical pesticides and fertilizers. Farms that raise organic cotton and call it organic, whether white or naturally colored, must be certified organic. 0:10 [Handwoven]
The cost of a combine harvester will vary depending on the brand, model, and features you choose. You can expect to pay anywhere from $100,000 to $500,000 for a new machine. 0:40
These factories are beautiful, I design these nets through which the cotton passes and enters the machines, it is a nice feeling to have an impact on this wonderful work
Cotton are the world's 51st most traded product. In 2021, the top exporters of Cotton were China ($12.1B), India ($10B), United States ($7.21B), Vietnam ($3.92B), and Brazil ($3.61B). In 2021, the top importers of Cotton were China ($9.73B), Bangladesh ($8.91B), Vietnam ($4.99B), Turkey ($3.99B), and Pakistan ($2.46B). 1:31 [OEC World]
One thing you did not mention -- when cottonseed is crushed, the small fibers still on the cottonseed are first cut off in a series of steps, and these cotton 'linters' are sold to purification plants which process the linters for use in many wonderful applications, including cellulose triacetate (for use in LCD screens), cellulose nitrate (e.g., lacquers, explosives), specialty papers (e.g., watercolour papers, banknote papers, friction materials, lab filtration), and cellulose ethers (for thickening applications). These linter fibers have a much different morphology than the long staple fibers... much more like rods rather than ribbons. So there are really TWO types of fibers on a cottonseed.
As stated above, James Hargreaves is famous for the invention of the spinning jenny in 1764. Simply put, the spinning jenny was a machine that used a large wheel to spin many spindles of thread at once. The invention increased the production ability of textile manufactures and was particularly important for cotton.
It's basically just a matter or separating the seeds from the fluffy part. You could probably get most of it done by washing it thoroughly with water and letting it dry out, and picking the remaining seeds off by hand. It's not TOO hard, but processing a bunch of it requires a bunch of hands, which is why slave labor was so high in demand back then.
Luciano Martinez I’ve spent a lot of time picking seeds and debris out of cotton by hand. The lint is pretty firmly attached to the seeds and it makes your hands ache. It’s not exactly hard work, but one can see why the cotton gin was an exciting invention.
@@ColdFuse96 Also a lot of cotton plant where had to get because of thorns on the plant, also slaves worked at the actual mill themselves because once again there was a danger because the things they used for cotton were very dangerous. I don't remember why but i think it was because thing would get caught at fast speed.
Started to scroll past this video. But I just stopped to see how far we’ve come.... this may just be another video to y’all but this video has a deeper meaning to me.
When Columbus discovered America in 1492, he found cotton growing in the Bahama Islands. By 1500, cotton was known generally throughout the world. Cotton seed are believed to have been planted in Florida in 1556 and in Virginia in 1607. By 1616, colonists were growing cotton along the James River in Virginia. 4:42 [The National Cotton Council]
One December I stopped on the side of the road in South Carolina because I found cotton balls all over the place... they must have blown off the truck. I'm from the part of NC that can't or doesn't grow cotton, so I've very rarely ever seen it before. It has such a tragic history here, but I was mesmerized, feeling it, that something like this grows from a plant and our lives are so dependent upon it. It was a spiritual moment and a thankful one; I still keep some of that cotton on display in a shrine and as décor.
The days before nationwide power, these gins had external power plants. When picking season kicked off, those huge engines could be heard for miles around, thundering away until the last bale is done.
Really enjoyed watching this video on the harvest and processing of Cotton. The cotton clothes of many types that have been a part of our culture and wardrobe that most of us have taken for granted not fully realizing what a benefit it has been. Denim Cotton Jeans first made by Levi Strauss about 1850 to supply the men looking for Gold in California Gold Rush. Levi Jeans and other brands are the most popular casual and work pants ever produced and this is World Wide. First worn by men then adopted by young women during the 1960s it has stood the test of time and is still going strong.
I think you left out the part about the people who picked that cotton. Hmm, either you don't know as much as you think you do? or you're just avoiding the subject.
@@patman0250 Before the Civil War mostly African slaves worked in the Cotton fields from planting to Harvest. After the Civil War , Long After, because most of the farms in the South were destroyed it was Black People who still worked in the fields because they knew how to work with cotton. The big difference ,they were not Forced to work on the farms, it was their choice. It was not until 1942 that a Reliable Machine was engineered that would actually pick and Harvest the cotton. The Cotton Gin only separated the seeds from the fiber , it was developed in late 1700s, the Cotton still had to be picked by hand.
I live in North Carolina and see several cotton fields.. its absolutely beautiful when in bloom.. my youngest daughter had never seen cotton and so one day i spotted a farmer who wa on a tractor cutting the cotton.. I pulled in to his driveway and he was wonderful us.. He even gave my daughter some cotton..
*One historic addition:* Brown and green-ish cotton occurs naturally in South America. Maybe it's a mutated version of the white one. The white cotton might be from the Eurasian planes, where wind moves the seeds. Cotton uses wind to spread the seeds, which means that it's original place must be windy, flat or good for the seeds to fly.
Simply put, the spinning jenny was a machine that used a large wheel to spin many spindles of thread at once. The invention increased the production ability of textile manufactures and was particularly important for cotton.
@cat bone a white man may have freed them but plot twist... It was a black person who originally enslaved black people. Tribes in africa have been enslaving others for hundreds possibly even thousands of years and it was these tribes that sold slaves to the Portuguese and caused demand for black slaves.
Guys enuf nw! Thr r chances Trevor cudve missed the picking part... u Dnt hav to b rude! Dnt tel me we all r perfect nd watch every single detail in all vids...mayb he wanted an elaborated vid on how it’s picked am sure thrs mre behind the scenes stuff even fr picking! Stop being abusive! Y nd wer is dis hatred coming frm...try to b human!
I'm amazed how friendly this comment section is.... So many lines could be crossed but ppl are just chilling watching like this is just another video. Good!
Except this show has never left? 32 seasons strong and constant reruns. But I get the sentiment, most of the science/history channel’s have gone to aliens and lost treasure/religious relics
You've been binge-watching HTAM for hours now. Do you even remember how they are made after you finish watching the videos? Me: Nope! But I love watching them anyway 😊
this video was really informative, i loved how you broke down the entire cotton processing journey! however, it makes me think about the sustainability of cotton farming. while it’s a major industry, isn’t it concerning how much water and chemicals are used? i wonder if there are better alternatives we should be exploring.
@@kcoker9189 oh and by the way, I didn't go to school in the US so I already knew that. they really only teach surface level stuff there in your schools.
@@theredflannelchannel7820 Yeah my uncle said something about it being done by hand. The way god intended it to be. Said a few other things to the the nature of the person doing said task and what happened if they didn't listen to the other said person, giving the commands...
That's why I like Cotton, God's gift to man. I loved The great US t-shirts of the 60s-80s that had features you won't find today, 'wash and wear', and a neckline that remained flexible and never lost its tightness than today's cheap Chinese junk whose neckline loses elasticity and become crinkled after a few washes. That is not a quality t-shirt garment, that is only good to polish car ducos or used as wipes for mechanics to clean hands and parts.
I want to thank all the color'd people of America who picked cotton for over 400 years. You truly didn't deserve that treatment. Thank you for building America. From an ivory person. 💕
Just drove down some roads here in NC on our way to the Atlantic coast and saw many small fields of cotton waiting for harvest…..wondered what happened to it after being “picked”……BOOM!…….here we are! Just amazing!
I don't know if it's the fact that I've worked in mahoosive factories or the fact that I'm now an auld git of 61 but I find this very interesting, thank you for making this video.👍🙏
This is the perfect show to watch on a Sunday afternoon, listening while you fall sleep for a nap on the couch
Nicole schouten hi
Lol yea I did fal asleep after dis vid...woke nd reading thru the comments 🤣
Bet
@@joeldaganasol6145 how pathetic are you lol
Yes!!
I've been trapped in an infinte loop of 'how it's made' videos
You are not wasting your time you're gaining knowledge my friend keep watching 👍👽
@@callofdutymobilesensei5918 I know right...
Oh no!
then u must accept the bargain...
Samidha Kale escape while you can... I’ve been here for 10........DUN DUN DUUUUUUNNNN.......
Seconds
How is an episode of "How it's made" made?
1. Proposal
2. Invitation to factory
3. Record
4. Edit
5. Profit.
Now, make a narrative story out of these, and you got yourself a How it's made: "How it's made episodes". Available on Disney channel.
Very nice
That's how black holes are formed stop it.
That's a knee slapper
@@thedude1744 😂😂😂😂👍
It is just amazing how cotton is processed. We really should appreciate all our clothes and linens and they are rather cheap considering all the labor involved. Let us be thankful.
They're cheap because of scale. Understanding how a small portion of the universe works makes this all possible.
Do you want me to stand infront of my wardrobe and clap for my clothes.
@@christopherrobbins2236 You should.
@@gnryushi do you do it, If so, how often?
More importantly, let us be thankful for the fossil fuels that run all of that machinery. I hear the old method for processing cotton was labor intensive and not very nice for the workers.
When my kiddos were young, I grew this indoors to show my kids what it looked liked, it's a fun project, and they can harvest the seeds in the cotton fluffs and grow more.
Are your kids black?
Satyr Satyr why
@@satyrsatyr3452 😶
@@satyrsatyr3452 bro that’s freaking funny 😂
@@satyrsatyr3452 bruh
The quality of this video is making me somewhat uncomfortable, after years of binge watching these on unofficial youtube channels at 240p.
MakoRuu ikr.
just change the video quality
im in school and its 2:49pm
Lol
"Traditionally Processed By Hand ".... hmmmmmm?!!!!
:-))))) yeah, black hands in particular!
@@TomislavKoren woah dude, thats kinda racist, no cool man 😬😬🥸😔😰😤🤬😱👎👎🦶👃🤌🙊😵
@@royisdabest Sarcasm and racism are very wide apart. I can see that you recognize only the latter one.
By hand was the best way to bad that had to get automated took a lot of good job away
Tomislav Koren u don’t have to apologize for saying the truth. There’s a difference between racism and truth.
I’ve always thought of how incredible it is that people invent the machines that do all this stuff. To me it seems you have to be borderline genius to come up with, and build, machines like that.
Or really bored of having to do all the work by hand.
Wasp it was
Eli was one bored fella! 😉
@mozamelomar8719
Yeah it's fascinating. I have a ton of respect for the dudes who make it happen. They're responsible for most of our modern wealth. Creating with 10 people what it would take 1,000+ to do otherwise. Amazing.
Imagine watching this with your grandpa and he starts saying "Back in my day"
It wouldn’t be too much different. Just more manual and you know what I mean by that. Not slavery.
Some of my fondest memories are of my aunt (who was only a couple of years older than me) and I running around playing hide and seek in the cotton fields here in Mississippi in the late 80s-early 90s. My stepdad and grandfather were cotton farmers.
Slave owners...
You mean slave owner...
Not in 1980
Wouldn't the spiky things hurt you while you were running?
@@Anythinguypromoteguru In the 80’s? Are you kidding?
Really amazing how many specialized machines take the raw cotton and through multiple steps, cleans the cotton. I had no idea that cotton seed can be used as feed for animals.
A lot of different things can be used as livestock food primarily seeds and stuff
Cotton Seed is also used as Cooking Oil.
@@zak9505 I did not know that, and appreciate your share.
@@guillermobarroso2990 Indeed, remains of oil and corn productions are also other interesting sources of livestock feed. If it food grade and humans don't wants to eat it by the masses, assume it's ends in the mouths of animals. Whether that's your steaks, pork, chickens, etc or your pets' like cats, dogs, fish, etc.
Sneed’s Seed and Feed
Real OG's remember picking and cleaning this stuff by hand.
i work at a processing plant for cottonseed we make oil and feed from the cottonseed it pretty neat to see this part of the processing even seeing some of the equipment we have on this video is pretty cool
I didn't realize how humorous cottonseed oil could be until Arnold's cousin Arnie read the ingredients on a bag of peanuts in a "Hey Arnold" episode.
"Peanuts, cottonseed oil, salt."
This video was amazing 👏
The manufacturing machines are awe inspiring. Who ever designed those machines is a genius.
Thank Eli Whitney. It was him who invented the cotton gin in 1791.
First, they take the dinglebop, and they smooth it out with a bunch of schleem. The schleem is then repurposed for later batches. They take the dinglebop and they push it through the grumbo, where the fleeb is rubbed against it. It’s important that the fleeb is rubbed, because the fleeb has all of the fleeb juice. Then a schlami shows up, and he rubs it and spits on it. They cut the fleeb. There’s several hizzards in the way. The blamfs rub against the chumbles. And the ploobis and grumbo are shaved away. That leaves you with a regular old plumbus.
you had me at dinglebop
Ahhhh geez
I remember when "how it's made" started out only as a website. Now they are a full-blown series, glad to see their progress.
After watching this video I’m starting to appreciate my shirt more
im in school and its 2:49pm
I just took a piss.
I'll give another update later.
same
@@calholliupdate?
@@unsweetenedcrumb9811 The piss went well. thank you
So, if I give someone something made out of cotton, I am literary giving them a bunch of flowers.
No. But if you want to believe that, go ahead. Why stop there? Refer to it as DNA.
Lou Fazio people like you rarely ever go anywhere in life 😂 you’ll probably end up joining the military or law enforcement since nothing else has ever worked for you.
fernando guerrero Don’t your people work the shittiest entry level jobs in this country?
@@peters4109 don't your people sleep with their own siblings
@@fernandoguerrero5244 damn so I have no where to go in life fuck you dude joining the Navy has always been my dream
I work in a cotton mill that produces cotton yarn. I always thought the raw cotton came from the same place. It's fun to learn things.
The naturally occurring cotton colors are shades of green, tan, brown, and reddish brown.
Don’t confuse naturally colored cotton with organic cotton. Organic cotton is any cotton that has been raised with non-GMO seed without chemical pesticides and fertilizers. Farms that raise organic cotton and call it organic, whether white or naturally colored, must be certified organic. 0:10 [Handwoven]
The cost of a combine harvester will vary depending on the brand, model, and features you choose. You can expect to pay anywhere from $100,000 to $500,000 for a new machine. 0:40
These factories are beautiful, I design these nets through which the cotton passes and enters the machines, it is a nice feeling to have an impact on this wonderful work
Cotton are the world's 51st most traded product. In 2021, the top exporters of Cotton were China ($12.1B), India ($10B), United States ($7.21B), Vietnam ($3.92B), and Brazil ($3.61B). In 2021, the top importers of Cotton were China ($9.73B), Bangladesh ($8.91B), Vietnam ($4.99B), Turkey ($3.99B), and Pakistan ($2.46B). 1:31 [OEC World]
No you didnt
Cotton is a beautiful plant for making pure cotton clothes for hot climates as they don't trap the body heat and don't create sweat , so comfortable .
You mean to tell me that cotton is made of *gasp* cotton?!
@@valkurite Yes, it is made of *cotton*
Brian Chirel always has been🔫
im in school and its 2:49pm
@@cozmic5652 so what
One thing you did not mention -- when cottonseed is crushed, the small fibers still on the cottonseed are first cut off in a series of steps, and these cotton 'linters' are sold to purification plants which process the linters for use in many wonderful applications, including cellulose triacetate (for use in LCD screens), cellulose nitrate (e.g., lacquers, explosives), specialty papers (e.g., watercolour papers, banknote papers, friction materials, lab filtration), and cellulose ethers (for thickening applications). These linter fibers have a much different morphology than the long staple fibers... much more like rods rather than ribbons. So there are really TWO types of fibers on a cottonseed.
Thank you for filling in the blanks, I was clueless.
As stated above, James Hargreaves is famous for the invention of the spinning jenny in 1764. Simply put, the spinning jenny was a machine that used a large wheel to spin many spindles of thread at once. The invention increased the production ability of textile manufactures and was particularly important for cotton.
I can't help but think of the people who did all the manual hard work to produce bales of cottons before :(
Edit: I'm Asian.
It's basically just a matter or separating the seeds from the fluffy part. You could probably get most of it done by washing it thoroughly with water and letting it dry out, and picking the remaining seeds off by hand. It's not TOO hard, but processing a bunch of it requires a bunch of hands, which is why slave labor was so high in demand back then.
Luciano Martinez I’ve spent a lot of time picking seeds and debris out of cotton by hand. The lint is pretty firmly attached to the seeds and it makes your hands ache. It’s not exactly hard work, but one can see why the cotton gin was an exciting invention.
@@ColdFuse96 Also a lot of cotton plant where had to get because of thorns on the plant, also slaves worked at the actual mill themselves because once again there was a danger because the things they used for cotton were very dangerous. I don't remember why but i think it was because thing would get caught at fast speed.
That's why people never progress. Always mad about the past.
@@RiverBottomBoys. I, as a German in 2020, can confirm.
Started to scroll past this video. But I just stopped to see how far we’ve come.... this may just be another video to y’all but this video has a deeper meaning to me.
We all know ok
Back in the good old day they used to pick it by hand
I've got 2 plants of my own growing
@cat bone wow hahahahah -_-
@cat bone and a whip
Now you just need a combine and a cotton gin factory. You're almost there.
No you don't
"Inside each stand are 116 circular saws"
"Where's Jimmy and why is this cotton red?"
. . .
That doesn't sound right...
The movie FARGO comes to mind
Uhhh
I wanna watch this on my TV because it's just so relaxing, kid friendly, informative, and just interesting to watch!
When Columbus discovered America in 1492, he found cotton growing in the Bahama Islands. By 1500, cotton was known generally throughout the world. Cotton seed are believed to have been planted in Florida in 1556 and in Virginia in 1607. By 1616, colonists were growing cotton along the James River in Virginia. 4:42 [The National Cotton Council]
One December I stopped on the side of the road in South Carolina because I found cotton balls all over the place... they must have blown off the truck. I'm from the part of NC that can't or doesn't grow cotton, so I've very rarely ever seen it before. It has such a tragic history here, but I was mesmerized, feeling it, that something like this grows from a plant and our lives are so dependent upon it. It was a spiritual moment and a thankful one; I still keep some of that cotton on display in a shrine and as décor.
1:32 That hot box is made by Samuel Jackson... This is straight from Django when Samuel Jackson locks up Bromhilda in the hot box.
:'(
😳
Now that I've heard the How It's Made guy say "fluffy stuff" I can die a happy man.
Learn something new every day.
"I prefer the old ways" -👴🏻
"we used to have automatic cotton pickers but you had to feed them for them to work"-👴🏻
HAHAHAHAHAHA
I was looking for comments like these to give me a good laugh :)
@@lovelylipbonesouwwwwwwwolv2198 fr same man
😂
This is a dark form of humor🤣
The days before nationwide power, these gins had external power plants. When picking season kicked off, those huge engines could be heard for miles around, thundering away until the last bale is done.
The whole processing plant feels like something that I would make in Factorio
Wow.. Amazing video.. Deep insight how cottons cleansed and made into bales.. Thanks for showing these type of videos..😀
NAVEEN RAJ u should see how cotton seed oil is made I’ve been processing it for 13 years
2:48 How the legend was born
Really enjoyed watching this video on the harvest and processing of Cotton. The cotton clothes of many types that have been a part of our culture and wardrobe that most of us have taken for granted not fully realizing what a benefit it has been. Denim Cotton Jeans first made by Levi Strauss about 1850 to supply the men looking for Gold in California Gold Rush. Levi Jeans and other brands are the most popular casual and work pants ever produced and this is World Wide. First worn by men then adopted by young women during the 1960s it has stood the test of time and is still going strong.
I think you left out the part about the people who picked that cotton. Hmm, either you don't know as much as you think you do? or you're just avoiding the subject.
@@patman0250 Before the Civil War mostly African slaves worked in the Cotton fields from planting to Harvest. After the Civil War , Long After, because most of the farms in the South were destroyed it was Black People who still worked in the fields because they knew how to work with cotton. The big difference ,they were not Forced to work on the farms, it was their choice. It was not until 1942 that a Reliable Machine was engineered that would actually pick and Harvest the cotton. The Cotton Gin only separated the seeds from the fiber , it was developed in late 1700s, the Cotton still had to be picked by hand.
Dam poor jamal
no way the narrators not making these machine name ups on the fly
Well, I'm on the 563th how its made video
This is my life now
“It was better in my day” - 👴🏻
1:32 *Samuel Jackson Hot Box*
yikes
Hold on to your butts😅😃🐸🐊
"I am tired of this motherfuckin' moisture in this motherfuckin' cotton!"
JBTechCon 😂🤣😆
So THAT'S where the idea for 'Django Unchained' came from.
I live in North Carolina and see several cotton fields.. its absolutely beautiful when in bloom.. my youngest daughter had never seen cotton and so one day i spotted a farmer who wa on a tractor cutting the cotton.. I pulled in to his driveway and he was wonderful us.. He even gave my daughter some cotton..
There being a cotton plant is itself amazing.
Why is the narrators voice so relaxing 🥺🌹
Balls
*One historic addition:*
Brown and green-ish cotton occurs naturally in South America. Maybe it's a mutated version of the white one. The white cotton might be from the Eurasian planes, where wind moves the seeds. Cotton uses wind to spread the seeds, which means that it's original place must be windy, flat or good for the seeds to fly.
My forefathers were all cotton company owners, grateful for this video
my cats would love to play with that fluffy cotton bail
The best voice over man for how it’s made
Even better than David Attenborough?
Nah the fella that does the UK version is better but this lad is good
Simply put, the spinning jenny was a machine that used a large wheel to spin many spindles of thread at once. The invention increased the production ability of textile manufactures and was particularly important for cotton.
can you do a video on how its picked?
They did you moron
@cat bone a white man may have freed them but plot twist... It was a black person who originally enslaved black people. Tribes in africa have been enslaving others for hundreds possibly even thousands of years and it was these tribes that sold slaves to the Portuguese and caused demand for black slaves.
It's picked with a tractor as shown
@@cyanessence420 you sound dumb
Guys enuf nw! Thr r chances Trevor cudve missed the picking part... u Dnt hav to b rude! Dnt tel me we all r perfect nd watch every single detail in all vids...mayb he wanted an elaborated vid on how it’s picked am sure thrs mre behind the scenes stuff even fr picking! Stop being abusive! Y nd wer is dis hatred coming frm...try to b human!
"I missed the old days when we used a different method."
-👴🏻
I knew this joke would be in here somewhere
@Max 63 you are so clever ...
Cotton is grown all over the world, not just by whites.......
💀
I'm amazed how friendly this comment section is....
So many lines could be crossed but ppl are just chilling watching like this is just another video. Good!
Huh interesting...I wonder how they did it back in the day....
They used black people I think
How It's Made 1800's Edition: How Cotton is Processed
Frankie Hogan-Stagnitto savageeee hahahaha
BLACK in the day 😓
Human ingenuity is amazing.
Human are not THAT amazing
I wish tv wasn't shit and had stuff like this back again.
Except this show has never left? 32 seasons strong and constant reruns. But I get the sentiment, most of the science/history channel’s have gone to aliens and lost treasure/religious relics
Those machines are amazing.
Note how the samples for assessment & classification are packed into a shared container - allowing test samples to be compromised by contact.
Top cotton producer in the U.S ... LUBBOCK TEXAS!!!!! God bless West Texas
You've been binge-watching HTAM for hours now. Do you even remember how they are made after you finish watching the videos?
Me: Nope! But I love watching them anyway 😊
I will binge watch How It’s Made for hours on end
I have gotten used to the sarcasm of the "How it's actually made" by Huggbees and I am waiting for a joke that will never come.
This machine build the seed cotton into a HUMONGOUS cotton block
this video was really informative, i loved how you broke down the entire cotton processing journey! however, it makes me think about the sustainability of cotton farming. while it’s a major industry, isn’t it concerning how much water and chemicals are used? i wonder if there are better alternatives we should be exploring.
Thank goodness for this machine.... We don't have to be slaves anymore 👨🏿🔬
Right. Not just slaves, but millions of poor workers, these machines allow all of us to have a better standard of living.
@@tubester4567 yes true, but more important slaves
Cringe
@@tomasvaris8162 when you realize almost all races, religions and people have been on both ends of slavery throughout history 😬
@@kcoker9189 oh and by the way, I didn't go to school in the US so I already knew that. they really only teach surface level stuff there in your schools.
هذه المصانع جميلة ، انا اصمم هذه الشبكات التي يمر من خلالها القطن ويدخل إلى الماكينات ، إنه شعور جميل ان يكون لك أثر في هذا العمل الرائع
Thank you for showing the modern process. So many steps to clean the fiber I have to wonder how they did it before the machinery. 👍👍👍
🤫
We don’t talk about before machinery 🙇🏿♂️
I clicked just to see the comments 😂
Same
thats sad
Dont you watch only see comments
I love how its made since i was a child , its Mike Rowe voice right sometimes ?
G Watsittoyaa no. It’s not
They should paint the tractor black...
2:53, awww, it looks like a cute little robot machine face :)
I have been searching on where to appreciate this type of work;" I Thank you so much, Garment Civilization", from Indo's central time.
0:18 it was the early 19th century, not the 18th
the 18th century is the 1900s
@@walikazmi7613 18th century is the 1700s
thank god this channel posts with the good narrator
I admit I chuckled a little when I heard “cotton-picker”.
I've been watching this program for years !!! I just love it.
Pretty sure my uncle told me that cotton was processed a different way... ;-)
brendan Franklin yeah my granpappy told me a different story...
@@theredflannelchannel7820 Yeah my uncle said something about it being done by hand. The way god intended it to be. Said a few other things to the the nature of the person doing said task and what happened if they didn't listen to the other said person, giving the commands...
Uncle Ruckus?
Smh now yall just being too much for no reason.
Unnecessary
This is the CLEANEST Cotton Gin I’ve ever seen!
there's an alf episode where alf became addicted to eating cotton. it's titled "hooked on a feeling" and it originally aired on October 23, 1989.
ALF: Alien Life Form
Some traditions should never die.
Punjab, Haryana & rajsthan's cotton is very PURE
How the times have changed
i just stop thinking about how fluffy the block of cotton is
i just stop thinking that people used to pick this cotton for free
hi from Mexico! Great video about how cotton is processed! thanks! 🙂
Whoever made the “Samuel Jackson Hot Box” has a good sense of humour 😂
Straight from django!
@@Svelaa yeah lol
We have a ton of cotton fields here in Alabama (that’s why we are the cotton state) and I’ve always wondered how exactly cotton turns into fabric.
A very informative video! This tells how cotton is processed.
My word the person who developed these machines are incredible
I think cotton is something that God personally made for people.
Amen ,,
That's why I like Cotton, God's gift to man. I loved The great US t-shirts of the 60s-80s that had features you won't find today, 'wash and wear', and a neckline that remained flexible and never lost its tightness than today's cheap Chinese junk whose neckline loses elasticity and become crinkled after a few washes. That is not a quality t-shirt garment, that is only good to polish car ducos or used as wipes for mechanics to clean hands and parts.
I think farts are our body's way of releasing magic that's been trapped in our bodies.
Like everything else in the world?
@@chicagojonesy food ghosts
I prefer the old way of doing things.
I’m confused at what point are slaves involved?
What's cool are these amazing machines that process the cotton.....and anything else!
Let's see how THOSE are made!!
Anita J in FLA I totally agree! I commented on the same thing (before seeing your comment) it’s amazing. I’d love to see how they’re made.
I want to thank all the color'd people of America who picked cotton for over 400 years. You truly didn't deserve that treatment. Thank you for building America. From an ivory person. 💕
Just drove down some roads here in NC on our way to the Atlantic coast and saw many small fields of cotton waiting for harvest…..wondered what happened to it after being “picked”……BOOM!…….here we are! Just amazing!
I loved seeing the transformation!
I don't know if it's the fact that I've worked in mahoosive factories or the fact that I'm now an auld git of 61 but I find this very interesting, thank you for making this video.👍🙏
This would be way different if filmed 200 years ago
Amazing how cotton is now picked by machines
I hope my ancestors don’t be mad at me for clicking this …. But I just had to see! 👀
I want to whip the combine like: pick that cotton there boy
That's the comment I was looking for
@@Beanut8370 have a swell day on the web fren
@@Beanut8370 same m8