Paperweights (1956)

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  • Опубликовано: 12 апр 2014
  • M/S and C/U of Frank Hill sitting at a workbench and placing numerous tiny tubes of coloured glass into some small round stone or wooden containers. Commentator tells us Frank is keeping alive the art of making milliaflore paperweights at a glass works in Wealdstone, London.
    Another man with a long pole takes a red hot piece of molten glass from a furnace and hands it to Frank who drops it into one of the round containers, then, with the pole still attached, starts shaping the glass and removes the container. Rolling the pole back and forth over a metal bar, he files the end of the paperweight into shape (this is the base of the paperweight).
    We then see Frank taking another piece of molten glass out of the furnace and moulding it into a circular shape with the help of some wooden (or stone?) cups and a pincer-like tool. He places this on top of the paperweight we saw being shaped earlier and cuts the glass with the pincers; this forms the top of the paperweight. Frank rolls the pole back and forth with the weight on the end, and polishes the top with a piece of newspaper.
    Frank knocks the paperweight off the end of the pole onto a table where another one sits. C/U of the finished paperweight; the glass tubes give a floral effect. M/S of various paperweights displayed on some red satin. C/Us of various styles and designs of paperweights made at the factory.
    Note: the name of the glass works is Whitefriars Glass Works.
    FILM ID:39.21
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Комментарии • 10

  • @sageknight6189
    @sageknight6189 4 года назад +223

    This channel is the flippin best man!

  • @chiragojha7311
    @chiragojha7311 4 года назад +124

    This is awesome.

  • @Trund27
    @Trund27 Год назад +2

    These are stunning.😮

  • @BL-rb7jm
    @BL-rb7jm Год назад +1

    there is not enough exposure to this fine art

  • @walletwarrior4322
    @walletwarrior4322 4 года назад +113

    That's amazing, they look beautiful

  • @Atylonisus
    @Atylonisus 11 месяцев назад +1

    Pretty crazy that in 1956 people were calling this "an almost dead art".
    I think glass blowers haven't been "big" since Newton's time, so relative to any other profession they will always seem "dying".
    If something needs to be made of glass, industries will have figured out how to cheaply and efficiently create it. If it's considered Art, then only the local glassblowers will make it and it will be called a dying art.

    • @joshschneider9766
      @joshschneider9766 4 месяца назад

      In the 1910s there were a couple of thousand companies producing weights like this. By Frank's day maybe 200. Today there's like ten doing it that well worldwide.

  • @joshschneider9766
    @joshschneider9766 4 месяца назад

    Weights like this were originally made in Venice Italy and copied by clichy in France then others as glassmakers started leaving Venice in the eighteen hundreds

  • @omarnour348
    @omarnour348 Год назад +1

    Anyone know if the fire made it past the turn of the millennium?

    • @joshschneider9766
      @joshschneider9766 4 месяца назад

      The company itself did but that furnace did finally give way to modern electrically controlled equipment in the 1980s when the original company went into receivership and it was bought back out of it by enthusiast investors. So spiritually no, it didn't, Frank's grandson is still making weights like this today for white friars.