I was born in 1954. Towards the end of my junior school years (from age 5 until 11), and only very occasionally, regular teachers were missing from class because they were either ill or had to do something else. We children were given time to ourselves (a 'free-perio'd they'd call it nowadays) to watch short projector films. They were on 8mm film, of course. And most were in colour. My favourite was a time-lapse film of flowers opening-up, filmed close-up and in glorious sunshine. My god, was it beautiful. These films didn’t happen very often; it was but a treat. At least for me. But how disappointed I was when something other than the flower time-lapse film - similar to the one you have here - and lasting only perhaps 15-minutes, was shown instead.
I was born in 1954. Towards the end of my junior school years (from age 5 until 11), and only very occasionally, regular teachers were missing from class because they were either ill or had to do something else. We children were given time to ourselves (a 'free-perio'd they'd call it nowadays) to watch short projector films. They were on 8mm film, of course. And most were in colour.
My favourite was a time-lapse film of flowers opening-up, filmed close-up and in glorious sunshine. My god, was it beautiful. These films didn’t happen very often; it was but a treat. At least for me. But how disappointed I was when something other than the flower time-lapse film - similar to the one you have here - and lasting only perhaps 15-minutes, was shown instead.
So mesmerizing. Thank you for sharing this timeless video🌹
It is such an aesthetic 😳
I luv it! 🌼
this is beautiful, what was this filmed on? x