- 41
- 56 050
Jim Talone
เข้าร่วมเมื่อ 22 พ.ย. 2011
วีดีโอ
From the Marsh.
มุมมอง 24K5 ปีที่แล้ว
Join filmmaker, Jim Talone as he visits and interviews 11 master decoymakers and two collectors, from New Jersey to North Carolina. Listen to them talk about their introduction to carving, their artistic inspiration, and the joy of living in their world of folk art and waterfowl hunting . Two of the carvers have died since we finished filming, but their words are preserved for posterity.
Shakespeare on England
มุมมอง 606 ปีที่แล้ว
These famous lines are taken from Shakespeare's. "HenryII" and read by the stall holders at Borough Market London
Victorian Cape May
มุมมอง 3.8K6 ปีที่แล้ว
The story of old Cape May is told in images and quotes for 19th century newspapers.
"In Three Minutes"
มุมมอง 11K6 ปีที่แล้ว
Decoy legend Pete Peterson carves a decoy in three minutes. His wife and daughter provide backup music.
"Went Agunning on the Meadow"
มุมมอง 3.6K6 ปีที่แล้ว
Narrated by decoy maker & guide, J. P. Hand this documentary describes over 300 years of waterfowling in Cape May County, N. J. Using rare vintage photos, film makers Jim Talone and Hand tell the story of waterfowl hunting on the Jersey Cape from the 1690s to the present.
Dallas Lore Sharp
มุมมอง 1K7 ปีที่แล้ว
Dallas Lore Sharp was a writer and naturalist from South Jersey who wrote over 20 books on the beauty of the simple world around us in the early 1900s. This video features his beautiful evocation of Winter coming on.
"Time to Move On"
มุมมอง 678 ปีที่แล้ว
This video is for Elyse Fiebert. Dave Fiebert her son wrote and performed the music, and his wife Mary Ann found the pictures
Ben Franklin and the Cape May Mitten Trade
มุมมอง 8928 ปีที่แล้ว
Ben Franklin claimed to start the Cape May Mitten Trade back in the 1740's but the work was carried out by the girls and women of Cape May County who business became the fourth largest source of income for many years.
My introduction to Dallas was through Volume 3 of The New Wonder World encyclopedia. It was his style of writing and love of nature which prompted me to seek out copies of the books he wrote many years ago. Thank you for this video.
Truly enjoyable documentary. Thank y’all
I love this
Compliments on a great documentary. Iv made few decoys when I was younger and hunted over plastic but they never lasted long and paint always chipped .I stopped hunting for past two years to start making my own decoys now I have 18 species and 6 doz wish I had a mentor to teach me but this season I can't wait to see how they work. Love how he said he was still going to put decoys out and watch the ducks work the decoys if duck hunting was ever outlawed
Thank you so much for creating this beautiful documentary. You truly captured their spirit.
this spoke to my sole like nothing else do more in other parts of country please
All craftsmen What wood do you use
White cedar or grade 1 pine.
@@davidhaines4927 Thanks For Your Quick Reply
I have been privileged to have known many of the mentioned carvers thru out the years Each imparted knowledge ,JP Hand inspired me in many ways ,for this i am most grateful.
Really enjoyed this video. Getting me started again after a long delay. Thank you!
Awesome
Amazing. Good work, I would love to have the carvers names at their interview spot, or at the end as a synopsis to the documentary. Not a criticism in the least I very much enjoyed the film work.
I loved this. Great production and people throughout. I felt right at home.
Great Carving & Awesome MUSIC... Miigwetch
Красота. Привет из России.
This really took me way way back, When my mom had play street on hope street!!!!...I love it and miss all of y'all!
Beautiful
That was just awesome.
Great people and video. Love Orsogna
What song is being played in the background and who sings it?
Wonderful little video and great decoy too. thanks.
It was.... pretty good. Yeah. 👍
Steve was a good guy, everyone liked him... nice video Dave, thank you for sharing.
I love the music!
Just great thank you.
This documentary is truly a great treasure, Thank you to all that were involved !!!
I enjoyed this little story immensely. It reminds me of stories my father told me. Thank you.
What an incredible collection of people! My friend JAC, who carves, told me, "It's not a decoy unless it's been hunted over!"
Outstanding documentary. Thank you.
I love the way he walks
He sure is good looking!
WOW! The images are magnificent, and adds such context stories my grandfather told of child labor in South Jersey. Following the death of his mother, he lived with his grandparents. His estranged father periodically came round, attempting to kidnap and deliver him to the glass houses. He remembered harrowing times when his grandparents hid him under the stairs, to keep him safe from the glassworks. And the long hours and poor pay of working in the fields.
Jim --- Circulating this amongst my Sharp cousins with great delight. Thank you for sharing Dallas Lore Sharp's lyrical words and beautiful imagery. Uncle Dallas is cherished amongst our family and your work beautifully honors his legacy.
I used to love going here when I lived in Philly! Love this place!
very interesting. Glass factories still big business in s. Jersey.
A great resource. Thanks a lot from Winslow Township, home of New Brooklyn Glass, Winslow Glass, Wilton Glass, etc.
Thanks to people like you, forgotten history is resurrected very interesting
Very informative well done
TC Wheaton was my Great Great Grandfather. Great video.
Fantastic work, Mr. Talone!
A very fine documentary, though nothing I wouldn't expect when Mr. Talone is involved. What I especially found interesting - and oft taken for granted were the bottles themselves. While helping with an amateur archeological dig in Haverhill Mass. I found a number of in tact bottles depicted in this film; bottles which I still possess decades later. Now to see the boys who were instrumental in creating them is, well, rather chilling, putting faces of children long dead to the bottles which still sit on my shelves. Once again a seemingly small thing taken for granted is given a new awareness. Enjoyed this very much. Thanks for the story told.
That was excellent Jim. Thank you for taking the time to put your strong photos, writing and editing skills together to give a glimpse into your Vietnam experience. I really liked the vulnerability and humanity that you conveyed in your reflection while tying it into a common phrase soldiers used back then. That was really cool. I also want to thank you and all the soldiers who served in Vietnam and have served elsewhere for your military service.
Very powerful.
Very nice :-). I love the combination of the reading and photos. Took me back to my own small dark places...
We have lost so many. This was nice real nice! F&M Rules
I am reminded how fortunate we were to have such a great looking library. I remember sitting at many of those tables 40 (!?) years ago. Thank you for your tribute to a place of shared affection. PS I love computers but miss card catalogs!
Jim, outstanding! As a former Recon Marine (1st) I can appreciate your soliloquy. I was also Basic Class 6-67.
Great! Love it. x
Great piece Jim.
Nice images. I love the colors. The music and narration work well together as well.
Jim, I'll never see a sandbag the same way again. I think ur work should be part of a curriculum for students of Am history. 'Makes me appreciate all those who serve a little more.
It was a nasty place. The ground was orange and dusty. It would your clothes orange.A blown up C130 sat on the marston matting and a shot down CH-46 nestled in the gorge at one end of the runway. Blown up tanks, forklifts,etc.littered the foot place of the base. The entire base was a maze of trenches and fighting holes.. every afternoon CoRock would rocket us and we stayed in our bunkers until it was over.It was an experience for sure.