Clips and Footage is a friendly and independent supplier of high quality archive film. Our award-winning team work hard with clients to fulfil the most challenging of briefs until that perfect piece of footage is found. All research is free and we can deliver material in all formats under pressing deadlines.
We have over a century of international social and political history, music and entertainment, war and conflict, transport and aviation, vintage TV ads and Americana along with one of the world's biggest collections of classic Hollywood feature film trailers, production shorts and screen tests. Just some of the unique elements of our collection include rare colour film of the Spanish Civil War, colour home movies of the Royal Family and four separate collections showing lifestyles of the aristocracy from the 1920s to the 1950s including the famous Mountbatten Collection.
We are proud to represent both small independent film collectors of rarities alongside some of the most well-respected film collections in the world. These include Lobster Films; a goldmine of fantastic moving images in colour and black and white, many of which have been beautifully restored. As one of the highest quality collections of early cinema up until the 60s, Lobster Films incorporates industry and fashion, slapstick, cartoons and adventure films.
We are also delighted to represent Historic Films with one of the most extensive music performance and entertainment film libraries in the world. With amazing footage of American lifestyles and pop culture, this vast collection includes newsreels, vintage ads, educational / industrial films and thousands of hours of superb performance footage covering all genres from vaudeville to punk.
We also represent the high quality Travel Film Archive which contains archival travelogues along with educational and industrial films from around the globe. The films, many of them in vibrant colour, show the world the way it was between 1900 and 1970.
1:21 recently that tech got in the market for personal and small bussines. Remember her words .." far more then what i can tell you " Quite interesting
Super, super cool piece of electronic history and gear! As of recently, I've been looking around RU-vid to see what kinds of things people are doing with old tech and in particular, music related. I have an unlisted video where I'm using a Commodore 64 to play a synth solo over one of my instrumental pieces. Should be made public and discoverable in less than a week. The Commodore has the SID chip inside, which is part of what made it a great seller back when. It's state-of-the-art , compared to the computer used in this video! 😂 I'm playing the C64 via a guitar volume pedal at my foot to transition through scale notes. The pedal is connected to the joystick/paddle port on the paddle pins. Scales are stored in a que and selected by the computer keyboard during playtime. Hopefully, the vintage computing community will think it's as cool as I think it is. The software is 99.98% my creation. Thanks for this video!!
These people would have been considered extremely wealthy for the time it's not a accurate depiction or rural Ireland 90% of homes were one open room you'd even have valuable animals in there at winter there was one bed were the parents would sleep with 3-4 small children and the 2-3 older ones would sleep on the floor you had one set of clothes you were every day and a clean set for church you worked from when the sun came up until the sun goes down a days work meant a days work.
I wonder if there were a bunch of Lost Generation peoples whining about the home values in the city going down because of all these new builds.. I wish they would consider doing something like this again to make it more affordable to own a home.
I can't even remotely recognise it. You can look back footage from other places and still it seems remotely recognisable. London is one of those cities you cant at all. Hopefully they are happy with the 35% british population.
This is the London I remember! My father worked in advertising and couriers would take work to the client for approval, I was hugely interested in the couriers and their setup, it was a whole scene back then. Then everything went digital, files could be made on a Mac and sent on a Zip drive and couriers could take more on them so less were required for delivery. I miss seeing all the couriers, the summers used to go on forever.
All my family worked in the Lancashire cotton industry..predominantly weaving in Preston. The exception was my grandfather, gassed in WW1 who could subsequently never work inside and got a job as a postman on leaving the Lancs Fusiliers. The reward? Well the terraced house into which I was born on Dunmore St (typical Lancs St with the mill at the bottom of the road, Methodist Chapel and a corner shop) had 6 of us living in a 2 up 2 down, no bathroom (tin bath in front of a coal fire on weekly bath nights) and an outside toilet (freezing in winter). It was the 1970s before this house was demolished but many terraced houses from the same era are still there. Although not living in Preston since the 1980s I still have a season ticket for PNE and whilst there has been much improvement to the town (always a town to me not City) the notion of applied 'levelling up' remains political rhetoric.