Wonderful that this footage is available and we are able just to click on a link on TH-cam and watch it all ! ( I'm an oldie and I love what the Internet has brought )
@MaryOMackie Absolutely I couldn't agree more, the evolution of the moving image is what fundamentally separates us from past generations and gives us the opportunity to look over the shoulder of our great grandmother at work. As you say it is astounding!
The country was richer back then. I live by the Rotherhithe pictorial museum. They were better dressed then than now as I often look through the albums
The women in general were a lot cleaner looking & not so slovenly as todays. Which is ridiculous when you think about it, considering the poverty around then.
Thank God someone thought to film those people doing those jobs. No one films manufacturing processes anymore. No one in a hundred years will know what it was like to work in a factory in 2008.
My grandfather was born 1915, but he died aged 93. Crazy to think that he was alive during the first world war and lived in a country still ruled by the Kaiser. Or that your grandma lived through the 20s.
There are Christmas Crackers & Christmas Crackers ...The one's being hand made are very different then the one's you buy in 2023 . I am 68 and Christmas Crackers I remember are 99% better then the one's you buy today especially at Christmas time , we had Crackers with small fireworks in them, like an Indian that smoked a pipe , magnesium strip, Bengal matches , a volcano that erupted etc .....Today the Government with not trust you to brake wind
The guillotine at 2:18 is identical to the ones in use today except that the operator has to keep their hands on two safety buttons while the blade is cutting. People used to cut their hands off all the time.
A little judicious Googling has reminded me that one of the verses in "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" contains the lines: "With little tin horns and little toy drums. Rootie-toot-toots and rummy tum tums." Furthermore, King Edward VII was apparently known as 'King Tum Tum' to his friends. There's even a reference that suggests Fortnum and Mason were called 'Tum Tums' but I can't find any further information. Seems to me that tum-tums were novelty sweetmeat gifts of the period.
hello.. i like ur piece thankyou.. after reading it i googled tum tums and besides all the anti- acid stuff i found a page with a synopsis of this little film! it even has a spoiler alert warning.. it suggests tum tum was the card centre in the Christmas cracker..
Wonderful film from nearly a century ago! As fun and funny as the last scene was, the woman sewing the stockings was hypnotic to watch. Piecework. I wonder what she got paid - a penny a hundred? I would hope a bit more than that!
The movie was filmed at about 15 frames per second and we're seeing a transcribed film at about 24 frames per second. Isn't there a modern digital process that would extend it to show what speed the ladies really worked at?
Just a warning to other viewers: the "introduction" lasts more than five minutes (out of a 6:19 film). The charming family sequence doesn't begin until 5:08. Still a film worth watching, if you understand that it's largely an industrial documentary with a very brief fantasy sequence at the end.
as unsafe as it was to work in places like that...the manufactoring process was relatively new then and im sure people had a lot of respect for the machinery they use and may have been a bit intimidated by it...nowadays we are so free and think nothing would ever happen to us that we need modern safety practices to protect us..great film :)
@MaryOMackie Yes! Exactly! The same with cylinder recordings and early phonograph records. Written history has been around for several thousand years, but we truly stand at The *Begining* of Recorded History. I'm astounded that more people are not amazed by that...
Oh that is so sad they are working so hard ,,and probably 12 hours a day 6 days a week ,,back breaking labor and then the accidents from being so tired ,,
@elenore9 Its a rather sad state of affairs. We should be making a lot of these products ourselves rather than importing them from countries on the other side of the world. Its isn't good for our economy and isn't good for the environment.
@exposed97 That sounds bizarre. When was this supposed to have happened? Japan didn't have dictators, they've had an Emperor from before recorded history to the Present, they had a feudal period with various warlords from the 1300s to the 1600s, a shogunate from then until the 1870s, and a parliament and Prime Minister from then until the Present, but no dictators.
to handle machine, 'em need to behave like a machine; so to take care of a buffalo 'em should first of all turn into buffalo- a matchin' type in specific case ... !
Since these ladies at the factory look at least 20 years old, the youngest of them were probably born in 1890s. Back then female life expectancy at birth was 47,8 years. www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/lifeexpectancies/articles/howhaslifeexpectancychangedovertime/2015-09-09
Women have always worked... (No, I'm not about to launch into a rant on how housework is a job.) I mean women have always worked in the 'workforce' (or the time's equivalent) There were fish-wives and maids and so on. Whats changed is what women are allowed to work AS. As for when womens rights came along... It depends on the right to what? If its work, then they were already, what to work as came slowly and still isn't finished. (Female soldiers still aren't allowed on the font line after all.)
مما أدهشني جدا نساء محتشمات جدا ،لاتوجد اي امراة منهن ترتدي فستانا (بدون كم ) ..حتى الأناث من الأطفال يرتدين لباسا محتشما....!!!!!! ياليتكم تعودون لما كنتم عليه ....
Great film to be saved all these years. Wonder if T. Eddison had anything to do with the making of this film. Great find. Women have almost always been in the work force one way or another. Men didn't like their wives working away from home. Kinda screws up the lives of their children and home life. Few men want to be Mr. Mom butttt, that's quickly coming to an end. Who really gives a damn about their kids welfare these days??? The Government of course. Kids make them money! Lots of it!!!
Dorthy No one forced anyone to work These women applied for an open position Got the position Did the work And got paid what they had agreed upon. Compared to todays wages it seems little but then the price of eggs and milk back then was relatively little. If you ask ANY worker today the will say they dont pay me enough for this job waaaa waaaa waaaa FYI a female has been allowed to pilot a $2,000,000,000 stealth bomber in combat
Ah! but then .. popular historians (punting a piece of Marxian Socialist dialectic) still try to tell us that 'women' did not go out to work (in factories, shops and offices etc) until the Great War.
Wonderful that this footage is available and we are able just to click on a link on TH-cam and watch it all ! ( I'm an oldie and I love what the Internet has brought )
...What colossally mind-numbingly tedious, yet inSANELY frenetic work to do, hour after hour, day in and day out...!!!
GO away Karen.
I believe the film is running quite a bit faster than actual speed. They were probably much slower and more careful about what they were doing
Some of the places I've worked at are not much different to this!
I kept expecting some sort of horrible industrial accident with all that old scary equipment.
+Justin Silvasy today you will be operating the steam slitter…..
When things were handmade!!! Love the little skit at the end.
@MaryOMackie Absolutely I couldn't agree more, the evolution of the moving image is what fundamentally separates us from past generations and gives us the opportunity to look over the shoulder of our great grandmother at work. As you say it is astounding!
WoW.. special effects to make santa were very good - 100 years before CGI. I'm amazed how well dressed the ladies were at work!
The country was richer back then. I live by the Rotherhithe pictorial museum. They were better dressed then than now as I often look through the albums
The women in general were a lot cleaner looking & not so slovenly as todays. Which is ridiculous when you think about it, considering the poverty around then.
Too much fabric. To hot and dangerous.
I imagine the romantic notion of that era is far greater than the reality of it.
Thank God someone thought to film those people doing those jobs. No one films manufacturing processes anymore. No one in a hundred years will know what it was like to work in a factory in 2008.
Thanks BFI, a great little film. I never realised that bandsaws and guillotines were in use a 100 years ago.
wow .. those days seem such a world away now.. I think i would have preferred to live in that world than the one we live in today..!
some very skilled workers
Not a guard or protective device in sight!
It gives me the grues.
9 years later my grandma was born and still alive at age of 92!!
My grandfather was born 1915, but he died aged 93. Crazy to think that he was alive during the first world war and lived in a country still ruled by the Kaiser. Or that your grandma lived through the 20s.
My mother was three lived to be 107yrs old, at home in house where I was born, died in 2014. The women were paid probably at 'piece work' rate.
My first thought was that my grandma would have been dressed like that. She was born in 1890.
one of my grandmothers would've been 17 in May 1910..
Silence is golden
We have Christmas crackers every year. It’s nice to see how they’re made.
There are Christmas Crackers & Christmas Crackers ...The one's being hand made are very different then the one's you buy in 2023 . I am 68 and Christmas Crackers I remember are 99% better then the one's you buy today especially at Christmas time , we had Crackers with small fireworks in them, like an Indian that smoked a pipe , magnesium strip, Bengal matches , a volcano that erupted etc .....Today the Government with not trust you to brake wind
@@davids8449 , I bet those were marvellous back in those days!
makes one wonder what we are here for.,..these people all living their lives and working and now they are long gone. Very interesting.
0:50, oh my freekin gawd! That machine always commin' at me like that I'd go run screaming after a minute on that job.
Enjoyed this, thanks! :)
Im surprised the man working on the saw still has all his own fingers,Health and Safety wouldn't allow that today.Anyhow great stuff BFI.
Awesome. Made me think of the Nutcracker by Tchaikovsky. I love this old footage. Things were made so primitively back then.
The guillotine at 2:18 is identical to the ones in use today except that the operator has to keep their hands on two safety buttons while the blade is cutting. People used to cut their hands off all the time.
Good to know that safety improved.
Film reminds me of my grandmother with the clothes.
Did you also have a grandmother without clothes?
A little judicious Googling has reminded me that one of the verses in "Santa Claus is Coming to Town" contains the lines:
"With little tin horns and little toy drums.
Rootie-toot-toots and rummy tum tums."
Furthermore, King Edward VII was apparently known as 'King Tum Tum' to his friends. There's even a reference that suggests Fortnum and Mason were called 'Tum Tums' but I can't find any further information.
Seems to me that tum-tums were novelty sweetmeat gifts of the period.
hello.. i like ur piece thankyou.. after reading it i googled tum tums and besides all the anti- acid stuff i found a page with a synopsis of this little film! it even has a spoiler alert warning.. it suggests tum tum was the card centre in the Christmas cracker..
i cant believe the length of that mans pipe near the end!
wow check out the stem on that clay pipe! @5:12
They didn't hang about in them days.
You can see their on piece work by the speed and dexterity of their work, and not paid much at the end of the week either.
GO away KAREN... JFC... u low-lifes forever trolling the internet desperate for online affirmation...
This was a fun little film to watch. :-)
the last part is amazingly funny..
Geez they worked fast
@miamad People still work in England you know. We are just stuck in offices these days doing rather boring admin jobs!
the ending was wild
Wonderful film from nearly a century ago! As fun and funny as the last scene was, the woman sewing the stockings was hypnotic to watch.
Piecework. I wonder what she got paid - a penny a hundred? I would hope a bit more than that!
GO away KAREN.
These workers had very repetitive jobs. It was a very hard life for people in those days - poor pay, long hours, poor conditions and uninspiring jobs.
5:48 How do you make this?
santa looks like a wizard.
The movie was filmed at about 15 frames per second and we're seeing a transcribed film at about 24 frames per second. Isn't there a modern digital process that would extend it to show what speed the ladies really worked at?
I slowed it by half and they were still working fast!
JFC... another KAREN Folks.
Just a warning to other viewers: the "introduction" lasts more than five minutes (out of a 6:19 film). The charming family sequence doesn't begin until 5:08. Still a film worth watching, if you understand that it's largely an industrial documentary with a very brief fantasy sequence at the end.
as unsafe as it was to work in places like that...the manufactoring process was relatively new then and im sure people had a lot of respect for the machinery they use and may have been a bit intimidated by it...nowadays we are so free and think nothing would ever happen to us that we need modern safety practices to protect us..great film :)
This is Jagex 2001
no the old machines back.then where more original. and the quality of the products were made better.
I wish you had some kind of audio telling what is going on?
great one! a gud industrial docu of dat time
And yet, 100 years later, nothing has changed.
...all that work in the factory, Gladys, and then you have to fight Jack the RIpper on your way back to the Barking tram.... Gawd luvvus!
ahhh...old world craftsmanship...er craftswomanship
@MaryOMackie Yes! Exactly! The same with cylinder recordings and early phonograph records. Written history has been around for several thousand years, but we truly stand at The *Begining* of Recorded History. I'm astounded that more people are not amazed by that...
Oh that is so sad they are working so hard ,,and probably 12 hours a day 6 days a week ,,back breaking labor and then the accidents from being so tired ,,
Most likely the workers were employed on piece work. From 1914 - 18 the factory would have been manufacturing war products instead.
I wonder how many people suffered injuries to their hands, and if they were cared for in any way afterward.
jongleurette no I doubt it ,,you lived with your injuries ..no one cared
@babywu48 I reckon it would have been piece work. No way would a factory owner potentially pay someone for not doing their share...
@elenore9 Its a rather sad state of affairs. We should be making a lot of these products ourselves rather than importing them from countries on the other side of the world. Its isn't good for our economy and isn't good for the environment.
@exposed97 That sounds bizarre. When was this supposed to have happened? Japan didn't have dictators, they've had an Emperor from before recorded history to the Present, they had a feudal period with various warlords from the 1300s to the 1600s, a shogunate from then until the 1870s, and a parliament and Prime Minister from then until the Present, but no dictators.
6 min of no sound?
"Watch what you're doing with that long-stem pipe.... He'll have somebody's eye out, y'know!"
to handle machine, 'em need to behave like a machine; so to take care of a buffalo 'em should first of all turn into buffalo- a matchin' type in specific case ... !
I bet that factory was a butcher shop of lost fingers in all that machinery.
Anyone know what tumtums are?
@Pzk12 actually we do know how things were made in 2008.
How it's made.
Yeah... Think before you comment
This needs some Philip Glass.
takes one to know one
Excellent vintage video. They were really working hard. All that repetitive movement. I wonder what their life's span was back then.
+Angel CityGirl The oldest person alive today was 11 then.
The female life span was about 48 years.
Since these ladies at the factory look at least 20 years old, the youngest of them were probably born in 1890s. Back then female life expectancy at birth was 47,8 years. www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/lifeexpectancies/articles/howhaslifeexpectancychangedovertime/2015-09-09
Life expectancy in 1910, in the UK was 55 for women and 51 for men. In the US it was 51 for women and 48 for men.
the part with the children at the end is such a downer!
👍
how about that lady making Clue Cluck Clan hats????
HELP!!!!!
MOMMIE HELP ME
some one took the gag off GrenadeChick and she is doing her thing.
waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa
Women have always worked... (No, I'm not about to launch into a rant on how housework is a job.)
I mean women have always worked in the 'workforce' (or the time's equivalent)
There were fish-wives and maids and so on.
Whats changed is what women are allowed to work AS.
As for when womens rights came along...
It depends on the right to what?
If its work, then they were already, what to work as came slowly and still isn't finished.
(Female soldiers still aren't allowed on the font line after all.)
Holy crap those were safe machines 😳😳👎🏼👎🏼
مما أدهشني جدا
نساء محتشمات جدا ،لاتوجد اي امراة منهن ترتدي فستانا (بدون كم ) ..حتى الأناث من الأطفال يرتدين لباسا محتشما....!!!!!!
ياليتكم تعودون لما كنتم عليه ....
i bet 4 yrs later most were working in factorys making shells and bullets during ww1 maybe it was better money to ..
Did they really work that fast, or is that just the jerkiness of the film?
They knew exactly what they were doing and yes it was fast paced but fast paced also means dangerous mistakes
What did that have to do with my comment?
Great film to be saved all these years. Wonder if T. Eddison had anything to do with the making of this film. Great find. Women have almost always been in the work force one way or another. Men didn't like their wives working away from home. Kinda screws up the lives of their children and home life. Few men want to be Mr. Mom butttt, that's quickly coming to an end. Who really gives a damn about their kids welfare these days??? The Government of course. Kids make them money! Lots of it!!!
this is sowe fuunytolookat
Somebody could have narrated this! We are out of the silent movie days.
Elizabeth Shaw Why don’t you narrate it yourself, smarty pants?
they got alot less then that
i`ll bet and the same wages as well ziggy lol.............
They don’t look Chinese.
Dorthy
No one forced anyone to work
These women applied for an open position
Got the position
Did the work
And got paid what they had agreed upon.
Compared to todays wages it seems little but then the price of eggs and milk back then was relatively little.
If you ask ANY worker today the will say they dont pay me enough for this job waaaa waaaa waaaa
FYI a female has been allowed to pilot a $2,000,000,000 stealth bomber in combat
Man that was creepy... 😳
What a fun job. NOT
Ah! but then .. popular historians (punting a piece of Marxian Socialist dialectic) still try to tell us that 'women' did not go out to work (in factories, shops and offices etc) until the Great War.
All that mind numbingly boring work would probably be for 50p a week.
Not true for the USSR!
Resenha sobre o filme: magiadoreal.blogspot.com/2022/07/filme-do-dia-making-christmas-crackers.html