Scale Model Shop

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Interesting job.

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  • stona
    • Jul 2008
    • 9889

    #1

    Interesting job.

    Here's some Pathe film of the place where they made the models that some of you are definitely old enough to remember in travel agents' windows and airline offices.


    http://www.britishpathe.com/video/industrial-models/query/industrial+models


    I'm not sure I'd want to make models for a living, and anyway I was barely two years old in 1959


    Cheers


    Steve
  • eddiesolo
    • Jul 2013
    • 11193

    #2
    That is superb Steve, really enjoyed watching that.


    £3 to £1500 in 1959.


    £63 to £31650 today.


    Not cheap at all and the craftsmanship is amazing.

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    • stona
      • Jul 2008
      • 9889

      #3
      Si, I think you've got a decimal place wrong there! £63 in 1959 would be worth between £1,500 and £3,000 today. There are many different ways of calculating relative value and these give widely different answers.


      I can imagine BOAC paying the equivalent of £1,500 for a nice model of their latest addition to the fleet, but not ten times that amount


      Cheers


      Steve

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      • Guest

        #4
        I enjoyed that. I also enjoyed the clipped voiceover. I became only recently aware that it wasn't only film commentators and similar people who spoke like that. I have been watching (and listening) to some old cinema films and interviews in the street and I guess that a good proportion of the British people spoke like that routinely.

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        • stona
          • Jul 2008
          • 9889

          #5
          Originally posted by \
          I enjoyed that. I also enjoyed the clipped voiceover. I became only recently aware that it wasn't only film commentators and similar people who spoke like that. I have been watching (and listening) to some old cinema films and interviews in the street and I guess that a good proportion of the British people spoke like that routinely.
          A lesson in the way accents change, or people alter the accent they use, can be had by listening to how the Queen spoke then (say the 1950s) and now. I mean she still sound posh, which is hardly surprising, but not that ear shredding upper class accent of days gone by.


          Cheers


          Steve

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