You are welcomeLovely film thanks for sharing it ...![]()
Lovely film, & that lady in the pale blue top is a dead ringer for my Mom!! & as for that roaring fire, cushti as Dell boy would say. I know those open fires were a chore & could be messy, but i do miss them. I had to get rid of our log/multi fuel burner because of health problems & now i have nowhere to roast my chestnuts :-{ Central heating is nice, but it`s not exactly cosy or romantic.I've already made a wish but I suppose theres no harm making another and wishing it could be Christmas every day. Many of you keen researches have probably seen this youtube clip before as I posted it 5 years ago now. My Dad was a keen photographer and though he worked in a factory all his life he liked to indulge in photography and bought himself a cine camera in the early 60s. He'd take it everywhere on holiday and spend hours editing the reels to play back when the family got together at Xmas. My mom gave me one of the early films with some clips of Birmingham town center, my Mom wrapping presents and Xmas night. It contained the last pictures taken of my Nan (the lady in the blue jumper). After my mom passed away I got the original copied and edited it down to 3 mins for my Dad as a Xmas present. It contains 3 generations of our family and still brings back all the expectations and excitement of Xmas and in particular my Dad clowning around with my Moms hair piece and those awful renditions on his arcordian.
About a year after I completed it I realised that it was actually Xmas 1962 but it was close. There are box loads of cine film in the attic and my son keeps nagging me to get them digitized. I suppose I'll never be short of work in retirement.
I do hope you get to here the sound track as they are sometimes stripped out. Enjoy and an early Happy Christmas! And hope it brings back memories for you Alberta
Lovely film, & that lady in the pale blue top is a dead ringer for my Mom!! & as for that roaring fire, cushti as Dell boy would say. I know those open fires were a chore & could be messy, but i do miss them. I had to get rid of our log/multi fuel burner because of health problems & now i have nowhere to roast my chestnuts :-{ Central heating is nice, but it`s not exactly cosy or romantic.
Instead of returning the bus, let's make it one of the regents which very rarely escaped from that route or one of the Johannesburg Daimlers, move it to Portland Road and run it as they used to under the 7 route number back to Court LJane, stop off at Villa Park, by the way if none of the above buses are available, can we have one of the piano front AECs or my favourite bus 1749 HOV 749.My wish would be to hire a bus in its original blue and cream colours from the Transport Museum Wythall. It would be routed as a 1A and I would sit on the top deck, seat by the front window, and be driven down Broad Street to Acocks Green. Chums from the BHF who are interested in buses could join me. We would go past 5 Ways, where I recovered at the Children's Hospital from an appendicitis operation. Past the road that leads to the Botanical Gardens, which I visited many times. Then on to the Edgbaston Cricket Ground and Cannon Hill Park. Up to Moseley Village and Wake Green Road. Dropping down to the Stratford Road and the River Cole, not far from where I lived. Climbing up Shaftmoor Lane to Reddings Lane (Mr. Phillips the dentist. Ugh) and Russell Road (a stone's throw from my primary school at York Road). Carrying on past the bus garage entering Acocks Green and then to the terminus at Acocks Green Village. Time for coffee and cake and perhaps seeing a film at the Warwick Cinema (if it's still there?). Dave.
Well, I am not ready to make a Christmas wish just yet; it is only the first Sunday of Advent. However, if you can wait a little longer then one of the 1930's. piano front style, buses - OV 4486 - is well advanced with its restoration by the Wythall folk. But they do have a good fleet of Birmingham buses such as 1937 Daimler CVP 207, 1947 GOE 481 and 1948 Leyland PD2 HOV 685 to mention just a few. The AEC types did run on the 1A.Instead of returning the bus, let's make it one of the regents which very rarely escaped from that route or one of the Johannesburg Daimlers, move it to Portland Road and run it as they used to under the 7 route number back to Court LJane, stop off at Villa Park, by the way if none of the above buses are available, can we have one of the piano front AECs or my favourite bus 1749 HOV 749.
Bob
Yes was Standard 8mm but the actual film size before developing was 16mm. The reel had about 3 minutes run time and had to be turned over in a dark room or changing bag half way through. When developed it was cut down the middle and joined, the clip above was from a full reel but digitally edited down to 3 minutes. The actual camera had a clockwork motor that needed winding up every now and then - now everything is battery operated - actual camera belowI quite enjoyed that. Some very well shot footage there, edited together to produce a smashing piece of nostalgia capturing a typical family Christmas from the 60’s. A real 'how things used to be' reminder of the past.
You dad was a very well skilled filmmaker, bearing in mind he (assumingly) would have been working with standard or super 8mm film. All the edits manually spliced and stuck together again.
Thank you. There are more and when I get round to it will post one of Elmdon park taken in the winter of 63.hello mbenne...i posted that film on the forum last christmas as to me it depicts everything i remember about christmas day growing up down the old end...thank you and would love to see any other films you have when time permits
lyn
I seem to remember the Jo'burgs mainly on the 9 Quinton route, but once while waiting to get a 3 to see my Nan in Harborne on one occasion, one came up Colmore Row on the 9 route, so as I had not been on one, went to Five Ways on it. The 1930s AECs did Villa Park duties but not back to Court Lane, but on one occasion in 1946, we were going to Harborne after the match and a piano front was three buses back, so I made Dad wait for it. Radiorails your knowledge is encyclopedic, so tell me when did the OÇ Morris Commercials stop running and which was the last one?Well, I am not ready to make a Christmas wish just yet; it is only the first Sunday of Advent. However, if you can wait a little longer then one of the 1930's. piano front style, buses - OV 4486 - is well advanced with its restoration by the Wythall folk. But they do have a good fleet of Birmingham buses such as 1937 Daimler CVP 207, 1947 GOE 481 and 1948 Leyland PD2 HOV 685 to mention just a few. The AEC types did run on the 1A.
The four BCT Jo-burgs - FVP 920 - 923 were rare (a fifth went to South Wales) and being 8ft. wide, technically not legal on UK streets but due to wartime necessities were allowed to run on cross city services initially which were outside the city centre. That did change later on but all were gone by 1954.
You could always send them a Christmas gift:
https://www.wythall.org.uk/index.asp
Bob, not to go into 'off topic' here - an easy thing for me to do I am afraid - I have posted some details in the OC 527 thread.I seem to remember the Jo'burgs mainly on the 9 Quinton route, but once while waiting to get a 3 to see my Nan in Harborne on one occasion, one came up Colmore Row on the 9 route, so as I had not been on one, went to Five Ways on it. The 1930s AECs did Villa Park duties but not back to Court Lane, but on one occasion in 1946, we were going to Harborne after the match and a piano front was three buses back, so I made Dad wait for it. Radiorails your knowledge is encyclopedic, so tell me when did the OÇ Morris Commercials stop running and which was the last one?
Bob
I will come with you to see Snow Hill, when it first opened,,I would like to have seen the Market Hall in all its glory with the roof on. I have very vague memories of going to it in the late 50s but not understanding why I got wet if it rained!
If I am allowed 2 wishes then Snow Hill when it first opened.
I went to see the Tolkein film today and they take tea regularly in Barrows, ahhhh I wish.I was too young to remember Barrows Stores and would have loved to have visited it. So this is going on my wish list. What item(s) of Birmingham would you put on yours? Viv.
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