Hey Dario. Thanks so much. Appreciate that a lot. Unfortunately, I don’t. I’m just a school teacher. The real experts are the Vikings I was with in the authentic clothing. In fact they made their own. If you contact them I’m sure they could help. I’ve linked their Facebook page in the description 👍
@@MrBradleyLearningMadeFun 😂😂I showed this to my partner and he laughed cos he thinks I'm fabric police too 😂 in fairness to you, the image of the knitting was quite beautiful 😝
@@tjthemunchkin5547 hahaha! That’s hilarious. Yeah I use stock footage to visually represent what’s being explained. Sometimes if I can’t find the perfect clip I have to improvise 🤫. I guess you caught me 😂
That was fantastic learning and you made it fun! (and funny!) I wonder how many caught fire with those sleeves though. I struggle in our times when working around a stove with my sleeves and very long hair, these people had it far worse and clothes were not made with chemicals to be flame retardant like nowadays. All the pillaging and plundering, just wonder if they went up in smoke too.
@@MrBradleyLearningMadeFun You know you are doing it right when you make it look effortless! Well done Mr. Bradley! ht when you make it look effortless! W
Wool and linen clothes are very hard to set on fire, as long as it is 100% natural fibres and no modern materials are added. We cook on open fires wearing these clothes all the time.
@@ormgunnarsson7939 I did some more research after reading your reply. It looks like you might just be lucky. What I found was wool does take a while to ignite compared to cotton but linen has a low temperature ignition level. There was also mention of weave determining flammable rate. The tighter the weave the the slower to burn due to less oxygen in the crevices. So a tight weave linen gives you more time than a lose, but wool gives you more time than linen or cotton, and synthetics melt before they ignite, while wool and cotton shrink before they ignite.
fun fact: to the Vikings if your cloths wasn't baggy and such it was considered that i didn't fit you so yeah that's the reason Vikings ware baggy things
This is one of the best and funniest videos on the subject, well done!
Why thank you kind sir
Cool video Mr Bradley, very well filmed!! Keep up the excellent filming!
😂
This is so so handy and informative! Thank you!
Nice one! :D
you are doing a really great thing. Learning something new every week It is really funny, keep it up❤
Thank you so much! Really appreciate your comment. I’ll keep em coming 👍🏻
I love your videos they are very educational!
Thank you so much for your comment! I am very glad you enjoy them. Happy learning 😁
Whoa! Loved it man! Keep it up this was so cool!
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoyed it my man! 🤛🏻
My teacher literally liked on this video and this is my favourite video
Great. Thanks so much
Very fun video! I would like to make my own Viking clothing. Do you recommend a source for tunic patterns?
Hey Dario. Thanks so much. Appreciate that a lot. Unfortunately, I don’t. I’m just a school teacher. The real experts are the Vikings I was with in the authentic clothing. In fact they made their own. If you contact them I’m sure they could help. I’ve linked their Facebook page in the description 👍
This really helped with my homework
I’m so happy to hear this! Keep up your hard work 😁
Funny to hear the Irish accent coming through his viking accent. Good video and fun to watch
Haha acting skills zero! Thanks a lot pal
good vid :)
Thanks a lot mate!
yes very good but too fast the filming, flicking about, you'll give people a fit
Ha! Sorry about that. You may have come the wrong channel my friend. I don't normally take the 'calm and relaxed' kind of approach haha
Don't you love in the weaving section when yer man says "woven cloth" they clip an image of knitted yarn.
Who are you…the fabric police? 😂
@@MrBradleyLearningMadeFun 😂😂I showed this to my partner and he laughed cos he thinks I'm fabric police too 😂 in fairness to you, the image of the knitting was quite beautiful 😝
@@tjthemunchkin5547 hahaha! That’s hilarious. Yeah I use stock footage to visually represent what’s being explained. Sometimes if I can’t find the perfect clip I have to improvise 🤫. I guess you caught me 😂
That was fantastic learning and you made it fun! (and funny!) I wonder how many caught fire with those sleeves though. I struggle in our times when working around a stove with my sleeves and very long hair, these people had it far worse and clothes were not made with chemicals to be flame retardant like nowadays. All the pillaging and plundering, just wonder if they went up in smoke too.
Thanks again, it was a difficult one to make funny 😝 Haha yes of course…spontaneous combustion was the number one killer for Vikings. 🥁
@@MrBradleyLearningMadeFun You know you are doing it right when you make it look effortless! Well done Mr. Bradley! ht when you make it look effortless! W
Wool and linen clothes are very hard to set on fire, as long as it is 100% natural fibres and no modern materials are added. We cook on open fires wearing these clothes all the time.
@@ormgunnarsson7939 very interesting! I learned something today. Thanks for sharing that.
@@ormgunnarsson7939 I did some more research after reading your reply. It looks like you might just be lucky.
What I found was wool does take a while to ignite compared to cotton but linen has a low temperature ignition level. There was also mention of weave determining flammable rate. The tighter the weave the the slower to burn due to less oxygen in the crevices. So a tight weave linen gives you more time than a lose, but wool gives you more time than linen or cotton, and synthetics melt before they ignite, while wool and cotton shrink before they ignite.
fun fact: to the Vikings if your cloths wasn't baggy and such it was considered that i didn't fit you so yeah that's the reason Vikings ware baggy things
John 3:16
Too bad about the fantasy haircuts