The Ancient Art Of Brickmaking - Impervious Building Blocks Handmade From The Earth

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 30 сер 2020
  • Brick Playlist • Bricks, Making, Firing...
    Visit Our Website! ➧ www.townsends.us/ ➧➧
    Matthew Patton's Diary www.townsends.us/products/dia...
    Help support the channel with Patreon ➧ / townsend ➧➧
    Facebook ➧ jas.townsend
    Instagram ➧ townsends_official

КОМЕНТАРІ • 2,2 тис.

  • @unclecharlie9022
    @unclecharlie9022 2 роки тому +1790

    There’s a brick factory near me I toured in college. The entire process was automated except for one line had a guy stacking bricks on a pallet. I asked about it and they said that guy had that job for 40 years, and asked them please not to take his job, it’s all he wanted to do. They said when he retires they would add the robot, but they would let him stack bricks as long as he wanted.

    • @somedude5422
      @somedude5422 2 роки тому +260

      At least they listened.

    • @megazver2
      @megazver2 2 роки тому +260

      They're gonna call the robot "Robot [that guy's name]"

    • @ganii1804
      @ganii1804 2 роки тому +113

      @@megazver2 that guy II

    • @afoolnamedchance4937
      @afoolnamedchance4937 2 роки тому +153

      Wow they didn't fire for a few dollars profit. If only all companies cared about there employees.

    • @Sammy-forgetaboutit-Tony
      @Sammy-forgetaboutit-Tony Рік тому +38

      good workplace

  • @SomeGuy-vo7we
    @SomeGuy-vo7we 3 роки тому +3368

    The bricks need more nutmeg.

    • @JohnLeePettimoreIII
      @JohnLeePettimoreIII 3 роки тому +53

      Why does this comment not surprise me?
      Well played! 😆😆

    • @MrBigbri2011
      @MrBigbri2011 3 роки тому +27

      We ALL need more nutmeg my friend!😂

    • @APV878
      @APV878 3 роки тому +60

      ....What do you think is in the sand he's sprinkling on top

    • @DomMini
      @DomMini 3 роки тому +6

      Lol

    • @kenet71
      @kenet71 3 роки тому +12

      How to make bricks stronger. NUTMEG!

  • @mrdaveofdaveshire4047
    @mrdaveofdaveshire4047 Рік тому +554

    I'm a bricklayer from the UK, when laying reclaimed bricks I often see the fingerprints of the brick makers in the bricks. These could be 200-300 years old, possibly more. Fascinating to see and now I know why. Also as a bricky we turn up on site with practically the same tools used all those hundreds of years ago and it gives me a weird sense of pride

    • @bighands69
      @bighands69 Рік тому +4

      More than likely you are using factory bricks rather than those made by an individual even if they are 300 years old. There would have been more human labor in those various era.

    • @seankeikbusch9404
      @seankeikbusch9404 Рік тому +8

      Funny to see this comment. I'm a bricky from the states and I just made a very similar comment right before I saw this one. Cheers! And LINE UP! LOL

    • @mrdaveofdaveshire4047
      @mrdaveofdaveshire4047 Рік тому +5

      @@seankeikbusch9404 haha nice to here we all use the same phrases aswell, here's another... It's not difficult just one on top of two.

    • @seankeikbusch9404
      @seankeikbusch9404 Рік тому +5

      @@mrdaveofdaveshire4047 hahaha!!! "One on top of two all day long" I say that all the time. Y'all threw me off a little talking about perps though. We call those head joints. Perps works just fine though, for perpendicular I suppose?

    • @mrdaveofdaveshire4047
      @mrdaveofdaveshire4047 Рік тому +5

      @@seankeikbusch9404 haha funny how similar us brickys are despite the distance! Yeah perps as in perpendicular like you say. Also cross joints is another popular one to call them over here.

  • @BellaAndBobby
    @BellaAndBobby 3 роки тому +432

    1:53 poor girl got a face full during that slam, then laughs it off nonchalantly like a champ!
    5:35 she learned

    • @controllerspixelsplayers9202
      @controllerspixelsplayers9202 2 роки тому +16

      lmao you caught that too?

    • @nijamkaj
      @nijamkaj 2 роки тому +28

      @@controllerspixelsplayers9202 The girl is the only thing he watched in the video.
      Edit: harmless joke which later turned into a $/// show because some people are ❄, take everything literally and are hysterical about everything.

    • @controllerspixelsplayers9202
      @controllerspixelsplayers9202 2 роки тому +40

      @@nijamkaj uhm.... what??

    • @controllerspixelsplayers9202
      @controllerspixelsplayers9202 2 роки тому +13

      @@nijamkaj WHAT exactly do you understand?

    • @nijamkaj
      @nijamkaj 2 роки тому +17

      @@controllerspixelsplayers9202 I understand him why he only looked at the girl, she is beautiful.
      edit 2: Fatal mistake, I gave a compliments. Back then, in the past, I didn’t know that giving components is forbiden in America and that it was a hate-driven society. (Oh no, another joke, now I'm definitely done)

  • @alexkuhn5078
    @alexkuhn5078 3 роки тому +1140

    "Whatcha doin on the computer?"
    "Watchin bricks dry."
    ...

  • @tesoro9623
    @tesoro9623 3 роки тому +1604

    I liked the killcam lol

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +378

      That was a fun little project

    • @tesoro9623
      @tesoro9623 3 роки тому +101

      Townsends It was a pretty neat shot

    • @Bobo411
      @Bobo411 3 роки тому +361

      It's the last thing you see after he catches you stealing the nutmeg.

    • @tesoro9623
      @tesoro9623 3 роки тому +21

      Bobo411 haha perfect

    • @YyColt45Yy
      @YyColt45Yy 3 роки тому +132

      POV: You are dunked under water and then assasinated by Townsend

  • @infinityinf1
    @infinityinf1 2 роки тому +42

    Her: he's probably texting other girls
    Him: I wonder if I can make bricks in my backyard

  • @samuelcorbin3694
    @samuelcorbin3694 3 роки тому +112

    When my Grandfather was 8 years old in 1903 his family built a summer kitchen from homemade bricks , and he described it just as you have shown here. that building was still standing when I went to see the old home place in Northern Mo. in 1990.

    • @probe26
      @probe26 9 місяців тому +2

      Lies

    • @trueju
      @trueju 8 місяців тому +1

      @@probe26😂😂😂😂😂

    • @luttuceman
      @luttuceman 6 місяців тому

      Now? I mean 33 years difference

  • @twitchsopamanxx
    @twitchsopamanxx 3 роки тому +848

    "Today we will create a nuclear bunker out of clay and 18th century tools!" Just like the american settlers did.

    • @owenscustoms
      @owenscustoms 3 роки тому +3

      Lol nice

    • @Raskolnikov70
      @Raskolnikov70 3 роки тому +35

      "Today we'll be constructing a laptop computer out of twigs, string and bog iron....."

    • @KaptainCnucklz
      @KaptainCnucklz 3 роки тому +12

      We'll be listening to 1750's music rather than music of the 1950's.

    • @sprungmonkey6inches
      @sprungmonkey6inches 3 роки тому +8

      The scientist guy on Gilligan's Island could make sea shells into spark plugs.

    • @Km0577
      @Km0577 3 роки тому +1

      twitchsopamanxx hahahhahahhaah

  • @griffin5226
    @griffin5226 3 роки тому +814

    This was about to be the first demonetized Townsend's video if Jon lost a few more buttons

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +245

      Hahahahaha

    • @t.u.5862
      @t.u.5862 3 роки тому +27

      Man...it’s been hot in Indiana. I’d have soaked my clothes straight through in that kit. Just a few buttons undone is a major achievement in rugged fortitude as far as I’m concerned.

    • @flowertrue
      @flowertrue 3 роки тому +38

      Yeah they got pretty wild back on the frontier! One, two, even three shirt buttons. And on some days they even roll their pants up to the knee!

    • @JohnDoe-tx8eu
      @JohnDoe-tx8eu 3 роки тому +19

      @@flowertrue nothing like when you get a full eye on the well turned ankle of that lass you fancy so much

    • @SgtRocko
      @SgtRocko 3 роки тому +9

      @@townsends Hey, the ladies need some eyecandy, you know!

  • @davidwortham6547
    @davidwortham6547 2 роки тому +26

    Great video as usual. Fun fact, the neighborhood of Smoketown in Louisville, KY got its name from the many brick making kilns found there and the smoke they produced. In 1823, Louisville had 20 brickyards, 9 of them were located in the Smoketown neighborhood.

  • @kuriboh635
    @kuriboh635 Рік тому +16

    This video always makes me happy to see. My father is a brick Mason and has done that for almost 30 years. He absolutely loves seeing how they did his work through the years especially because he loves working on historic properties

  • @R3troZone
    @R3troZone 3 роки тому +449

    You get the impression that everyone else on that assembly line is like "Let chat more molding brick boy."

    • @justalurkr
      @justalurkr 3 роки тому +30

      Yeah, they're definitely getting ahead of him!

    • @rafetizer
      @rafetizer 3 роки тому +17

      lmao "Brick Boy"!

    • @Star_cab
      @Star_cab 2 роки тому +4

      You getting learned up too vulgarr?

    • @Loan--Wolf
      @Loan--Wolf 2 роки тому

      i was thinking the same thing

  • @pokeman5000
    @pokeman5000 3 роки тому +504

    Pretty stoked. This, smithing, and glass making are by far the most interesting for frontier work.

    • @carsonrush3352
      @carsonrush3352 3 роки тому +18

      You should add coppicing to the list of interesting vocations. The making of charcoal and wood gas is one aspect of early chemical industries.

    • @FoolOfATuque
      @FoolOfATuque 3 роки тому

      Ba dum tiss!

    • @Humma_Kavula
      @Humma_Kavula 3 роки тому

      Yeesss, more building related stuff!!!

    • @vivianscircle
      @vivianscircle 3 роки тому +3

      It's also sad that these skills are fading into oblivion day by day. 😢

    • @JohnDoe-tx8eu
      @JohnDoe-tx8eu 3 роки тому +8

      @@vivianscircle because the industrial complex can't make money on people who can produce their own goods. It's not good for your wallet if people can just make things themselves. Thus we now live in a throw away society that is beginning to throw away knowledge.

  • @NeonShadowsx
    @NeonShadowsx 3 роки тому +61

    Permanent structures! This opens up so many new fields to explore! I'm sure you would have a lot of fun going over the different period "pattern books", basically recipe books for buildings!

  • @Thesouthwillriseagain
    @Thesouthwillriseagain 3 роки тому +12

    I like how that dog wasn’t scared about her smackin those bricks and just bites a flea lol

  • @MrBigbri2011
    @MrBigbri2011 3 роки тому +726

    I have laid reclaimed bricks from the 1600’s before in the UK. These are generally used when a building with a heritage protection order needs repair work or has an extension built to it. It helps to keep the building in character for it’s age. Many have makers marks in them - deliberate thumb or finger impressions in the same place on each brick. Some have marks made with a stick or a tool of some kind.

    • @DomMini
      @DomMini 3 роки тому +25

      That’s cool!

    • @VeryCherryCherry
      @VeryCherryCherry 3 роки тому +107

      Oh man, see, your government understands heritage buildings, and how to go about proper repairs and even can add extensions! In Ottawa, Canada, there's a rule that any new construction on a heritage building must remain distinct from the original construction. It's so ridiculous. You end up with modern looking renovations and extensions on lovely, old buildings. There is a huge argument going on in my city about a much needed expansion of a gorgeous, French Gothic Revival chateauesque hotel. The city keeps revealing plans for hideous, modern buildings with awful barcode-like widows, and no one wants it to look that way other than the architects who got the contract. I won't go into it here; you can Google it, it's all available for the public to see. It's gross. Edit: if you want to Google it's the Fairmont Château Laurier, Ottawa, ON

    • @nithshithhith4398
      @nithshithhith4398 3 роки тому +69

      @@VeryCherryCherry Sounds like they're actively trying to destroy the history of your country.

    • @gasfiltered
      @gasfiltered 3 роки тому +28

      @@VeryCherryCherry I see both sides of this, and tbh, I fall on the side of your government. Making additions appear as though they were a part of the original building is disingenuous, a fake which both is a lie written in stone and is sort of an insult to the original builder. It distorts the history of the building and your town. By making additions very distinct, a historic building is preserved but it's limitations are addressed in a way that doesn't alter it's story.

    • @VeryCherryCherry
      @VeryCherryCherry 3 роки тому +5

      @@nithshithhith4398 I know! :(

  • @MrEurolaf
    @MrEurolaf 3 роки тому +304

    Burning the kiln is a long process and takes days! I can’t wait to see you guys build the kiln and start the burning!

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +77

      We are excited for it!

    • @moviereviews541
      @moviereviews541 3 роки тому +8

      @@townsends I can't wait to see it either! Very interesting how people made things back then.

    • @ProfesserLuigi
      @ProfesserLuigi 3 роки тому +5

      Always wanted to see how to build a kiln from scratch.

    • @lewisdoherty7621
      @lewisdoherty7621 3 роки тому +8

      ​@@townsends Maybe you could throw in some crockery as an experiment. Crockery would probably be fired at a higher temperature than bricks, but since it would be thinner, it might be fired over less time. If you are having a big fire, throw everything in. In the1960s, I was sent to summer camp. There were all of the usual boring handicraft projects. I decided to create an unauthorized project, when I found some really nice clay in the stream bank. I made a little bowl, dried it and when there was a big bonfire, as there was every night, I threw it in. The next day I looked in the ashes and it had worked.
      Crockery is a major area for archeologists. A small settlement in which everything has rotted and washed away can be found by crockery shards and they can tell who lived there at what time.

    • @dhession64
      @dhession64 3 роки тому +2

      @@townsends there is a series on YT about making a castle in the way of the 13th Century, and it covers many aspects including brick firing. It's fascinating and educational. I wish I could remember what the series was called. It took place in the modern French countryside with English anthropologists as commentators and reenactors for the series.

  • @MMGJ10
    @MMGJ10 3 роки тому +24

    As a bricklayer i found this video really cool. Thank you for sharing.
    Funny, just today i found an old handmade brick in a walkway of the property i bought that had 3 distinct finger marks In it.
    I was guessing the brick to be approx late 1800's. It could've possibly been even older. .
    I just find it amazing to think that those finger marks were made by someone who was probably alive during the Civil War.. Possibly even the revolutionary war.

  • @glorygloryholeallelujah
    @glorygloryholeallelujah 3 роки тому +52

    *”1 brick doesn’t do anybody any good!”
    Well sir, I do believe the man with _no brick_ would disagree with you. 😆❤️

  • @brandonjoseph4495
    @brandonjoseph4495 3 роки тому +419

    "We've been on this homestead for over a year." Me: Wait . . . what? Is that right? Crap, it is! Time has no meaning now . . . .

  • @Zelmel
    @Zelmel 3 роки тому +102

    Wow, Ivy's gotten so big! I remember watching your old videos and seeing her helping you in the kitchen set standing on a stool, and now she's almost as tall as you!

    • @GerackSerack
      @GerackSerack 3 роки тому +20

      Yeah, makes you feel kinda old, doesn't it! It seems it was yesterday when she was helping John with the cookie recipe.

    • @xxCrimsonSpiritxx
      @xxCrimsonSpiritxx 3 роки тому +5

      that's wholesome, he is building her an empire on YT, hope she continues long after we old geezers are gone :)

  • @scuttledog
    @scuttledog 3 роки тому +78

    Jon, your daughter is growing up so fast! You must be one proud papa to have her out there
    working with you like that. It's so nice to see these old skills brought to life.

  • @lindsayalisonstevens3592
    @lindsayalisonstevens3592 2 роки тому +7

    Jon is either making bricks or murdering someone with clay 🤣🤣🤣 Seriously though, such dynamic film-making. Major props, Townsends 😎👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽

  • @jmegown52302
    @jmegown52302 3 роки тому +92

    My great great great grandfather (immigrant from county Down Ireland) Samuel Megown and my great great grandfather John Megown were brick makers and brick layers, and built the first brick building in Pittsburgh PA in the early 1800's.

    • @logoseven3365
      @logoseven3365 3 роки тому +10

      My great grandfather,William Nicoll, immigrated from Monikie Scotland and laid bricks and stone in Pittsburgh. Small world.

    • @murtazaaliahmad1905
      @murtazaaliahmad1905 2 роки тому +1

      One question

    • @thomaslipstenstien5282
      @thomaslipstenstien5282 2 роки тому +3

      Cool. My g/dad was a railway engineer, his bridges are still here. When he wasn't building awesome stuff, he was drunk... allegedly!

    • @Drtydeeds
      @Drtydeeds 2 роки тому +1

      @@murtazaaliahmad1905 profound.

  • @Jacob-yg7lz
    @Jacob-yg7lz 3 роки тому +118

    "No man ever wetted clay and left it, as if there would be bricks by chance and fortune."
    -Plutarch

    • @TheGreegles
      @TheGreegles 3 роки тому +17

      I read that in Sean Bean's voice thanks to Civ VI

    • @Jacob-yg7lz
      @Jacob-yg7lz 3 роки тому +9

      @@TheGreegles Where else do you think I got this quote?

    • @justanotherbaptistjew5659
      @justanotherbaptistjew5659 3 роки тому +15

      Jacob Furrow
      The only reason anyone knows that quote is because of Civ 6. Plutarch first heard that quote on Civ 6.

    • @Jacob-yg7lz
      @Jacob-yg7lz 3 роки тому +9

      @@justanotherbaptistjew5659 We all live in a game of Civ 6, Plutarch just happened to be close enough to the player camera to hear Shaun Bean's voice emanating from the sky.

  • @marandabarry141
    @marandabarry141 3 роки тому +7

    Makes me so happy to see Ivy learning all of this and participating! What a cool opportunity for a young person

  • @thishandleisntavailable1
    @thishandleisntavailable1 3 роки тому +11

    I love how wholesome this channel is. I always leave feeling better then when I arrived.

  • @hellomjb
    @hellomjb 3 роки тому +309

    I've watched this process in rural Iraq, pretty incredible that it's changed very little in 1000 years!! I guess if it's not broken, don't fix it!!

    • @OspreyKnight
      @OspreyKnight 3 роки тому +43

      Saw it in Afghanistan. It was absolutely fascinating. Hard working people too.

    • @adamwelch4336
      @adamwelch4336 3 роки тому +16

      Some concepts are timeless! There part of the story of mankind!

    • @Nobody-dc8dp
      @Nobody-dc8dp 3 роки тому +5

      Why are you shouting!!

    • @OspreyKnight
      @OspreyKnight 3 роки тому +6

      @@Nobody-dc8dp Emphasis and excitement. ! doesn't mean shouting.

    • @Nobody-dc8dp
      @Nobody-dc8dp 3 роки тому +1

      @@OspreyKnight It goes both ways.

  • @eldorados_lost_searcher
    @eldorados_lost_searcher 3 роки тому +264

    This is fascinating. My Mom's family had a brick making factory at one point, and they still find bricks with their mark in the closest city.

    • @unsn88
      @unsn88 2 роки тому +8

      thats cool

    • @aldod3937
      @aldod3937 2 роки тому +9

      Yes us also in Italy in the early 1930s

    • @davemarx7856
      @davemarx7856 2 роки тому +7

      Legacy

    • @martyfoster7053
      @martyfoster7053 Рік тому +1

      @@aldod3937 I am on unit 24 of Pimsleurs Italian Language! Learning Italian! Actually, I'm learning 8 Languages at once, but Italian is the one on which I focus primarily!

  • @mariachristinexo
    @mariachristinexo 3 роки тому +9

    Thank you for this! I really enjoy all of your videos and was very excited to see this one posted. My 10th great-grandfather was the official brick maker in Swansea, MA in the 1670s. I have long wondered what his job was actually like. This was a quick glimpse into that world. Thank you so much. 😊

  • @breyjames5025
    @breyjames5025 3 роки тому +6

    My elementary school had clay under the sand pit, fond memories of playing with that clay, it was alot like what they're using to make the bricks

  • @ashleighlecount6152
    @ashleighlecount6152 3 роки тому +144

    This has been one of my favorite series that you guys have done on this channel.

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +30

      We appreciate that! It's been a lot of fun.

  • @solomoncumquats776
    @solomoncumquats776 3 роки тому +259

    This is the only channel that deserves over 4 billion subscribers

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +47

      Thanks so much! We would love that haha

    • @solomoncumquats776
      @solomoncumquats776 3 роки тому +14

      @@townsends I would love that for you

  • @michaeltheisen
    @michaeltheisen Рік тому +3

    I love these nonfood videos too! It's like going into a time machine and watching it be done.

  • @timbradley777
    @timbradley777 2 роки тому

    Use a removable peg in your worktop to push the wooden mould against brother, then single strike to excess away from you. No more grubby hands. Love what you're all doing. Hey from NZ.

  • @SuperSneakySteve
    @SuperSneakySteve 3 роки тому +26

    I've watched your little girl grow up on this channel. You must be one proud father.

  • @TheMasterOfCornedy
    @TheMasterOfCornedy 3 роки тому +196

    6:30 POV: you told jon not to add nutmeg to your meal

    • @GiftedFestiveBee
      @GiftedFestiveBee 3 роки тому +6

      UNDERRATED COMMENT XD

    • @GiftedFestiveBee
      @GiftedFestiveBee 3 роки тому +8

      I think i'm gonna turn this into a gif

    • @austindude1333
      @austindude1333 3 роки тому +12

      POV: you are a brick mold and john is about to make bricks

    • @kinks_6113
      @kinks_6113 3 роки тому +1

      Gold

    • @grapetomatogirl2141
      @grapetomatogirl2141 3 роки тому +1

      I can’t stop replaying it now!
      I honestly laughed out loud ... ... I can’t stop doing that either!
      😳🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @darriscottch3355
    @darriscottch3355 2 роки тому +2

    I don't know how watching brickmaking gave me an epiphany moment, but it shed light on a dream I had last night. This channel is inspirational. This also reminds me of when I used to make snow bricks for forts lol.

  • @chazblank2717
    @chazblank2717 3 роки тому +8

    I was working on old row houses in DC... one of the hardest parts was that standardized brick sizes didn’t really exist when those houses were built...

  • @Napoleon_based
    @Napoleon_based 3 роки тому +78

    i had no idea Brick making was so complicated
    thank you for sharing this knowledge

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +11

      Not a problem! Glad you liked it.

    • @gasfiltered
      @gasfiltered 3 роки тому +2

      You should check out a channel called primitive technology if you want to see some incredible barebones ceramic work

    • @chimpaflimp
      @chimpaflimp 3 роки тому

      Still much quicker and cheaper than carving them out of stone, though

  • @gergokerekes4550
    @gergokerekes4550 3 роки тому +71

    In a path made out of old bricks in my grandparents garden there is a brick that has this written into it: "I was paid well, and they gave me wine, I like wine."
    the bricks came from their grandparents house when it was renovated. So I think it might 170-200 years old.
    In small villages it was cheaper to make them on the spot than to transport it, and well judging by the writing the job had benefits too!

  • @paulbriggs3072
    @paulbriggs3072 Рік тому +3

    The Dutch in New York State used softer clay (a lot less strenuous) and somewhat thinner bricks to speed drying. Plus faster firing. 3 bricks in a 3 brick mould speeds things also. They dispensed with the sand and used clay slip to keep them from sticking to the moulds. These were called 'slop moulded' as the downside is they do splatter wet clay on you. In addition, the brick moulds were filled while sitting on little thin boards. Then lifted off leaving the bricks on these little thin boards which were carried away to dry. This protected the fragile softer clay from disfiguring and greatly reduced waste from damage.

  • @dunkace
    @dunkace 3 роки тому +6

    Townsends produces such incredible videos. I absolutely love them! The film, music and information just gets better and better!

  • @ulfberth4415
    @ulfberth4415 3 роки тому +194

    this actually reminds me of the story my grandma told me once. back when she was young she built her first home with adobe bricks she made all on her self with her father. its even more amazing to know how hard the process is now. great video

    • @yungvoid4596
      @yungvoid4596 2 роки тому +3

      Your grandma is 500 years old then

    • @KelikakuCoutin
      @KelikakuCoutin Рік тому +3

      I've heard that adobe has a kind of natural 'air conditioning' which keeps the interior of a building cool.
      I do not think these are actual adobe bricks.

    • @captainrob9044
      @captainrob9044 Рік тому +12

      Because back then you could build your own house that lasted over 100 years VS the crap they put up now that they dare to call "houses"🤮.

    • @aramisortsbottcher8201
      @aramisortsbottcher8201 Рік тому +1

      @@captainrob9044 But you wouldn't want to live in a house without insulation, with uneven floors, no water pipes or electricity, would you?

    • @kenthatfield4287
      @kenthatfield4287 Рік тому +5

      The house I was brought up in in Southern California was made completely out of adobe brick. The Adobe used was a hybrid that they developed somewhere around the 1940s or so. The house kept cool except when a Santa Anna came along. Then we brought out the fans we did not have an air conditioner in the home there was no need for one.

  • @dankvu
    @dankvu 3 роки тому +36

    I love how you all are upgrading the tech you have. Wood -> Stone -> Steel -> Nutmeg Steel?

  • @ToyTruck
    @ToyTruck День тому

    I helped my grandpa made bricks when I was a little kid. We actually use much thinner clay. So, it took less time pouring the mixture into the mold and it was also easier to lift it. We would make a marking using our finger on the top side of each brick, either a diagonal line or a curve ("n" shape). Well, our bricks thickness was half as those in the video. After putting under the sun for several days, we would bake the bricks by stacking them with some space (tunnels) inside so we could insert some wood inside.

  • @colsonlv
    @colsonlv 2 роки тому

    Ivy's face when you slam down the first clay. Priceless. :)

  • @aenorist2431
    @aenorist2431 3 роки тому +15

    Love the routine with which she turns her head, everytime you slap down the clay.
    You really get these ingrained movements, which are a big part of experimental archeology to me.
    Once you adjust that belt for the three hundreth time, you realize why this "ornamental" thing goes where it does.

    • @carpespasm
      @carpespasm 3 роки тому +6

      The work will teach you how to do it efficiently if you pay any kind of attention. With something like this you work out the smoothest way to do it because anything less is harder.

    • @fakshen1973
      @fakshen1973 3 роки тому +3

      My brick mold brings all the boys to the yard. We work collectively so no one has to charge.

  • @chuckmikey001
    @chuckmikey001 3 роки тому +15

    Love the pov sequence where she carries the brick over knocks it out of the mold and brings it back, that must have been some interesting editing!

  • @tommywolfe2706
    @tommywolfe2706 Рік тому +1

    The girl helping is showing a ton of patience and doing an excellent job of being chill and along for the ride, doing her part in the process.....and honestly, she looks like she has the harder part. I would be bored out of my mind watching that kind of action, getting to beat and knead the clay and then slam it into the mold is definitely the more fun part. Maybe harder physically, but more engaging. Standing and watching that? That girls has excellent patience and deserves a shout out!
    Awesome video! I wonder, how many bricks do you think you can make in a minute with your operation? The end goal of that question is to figure out if you are at the same level as the brick makers back then. I think you might be. You operation seems pretty smooth!
    If that one guy (him and a team, right?) could make 1500 in a day, i think you seem to be matching that sort of pace, assuming he was working longer hours and more days of the week. People worked like crazy back then, right?

  • @kenmartin9106
    @kenmartin9106 Рік тому

    My neighbor was in his 90s in late 1970s he showed me the spots where the clay came from for his house. I can still see them when I drive by his land RIP Mr. Miller

  • @lmckay8881
    @lmckay8881 3 роки тому +25

    I enjoyed the perspective of the brick as it was being created. (A tip of my hat to the director for that one!)

  • @vintage1950
    @vintage1950 3 роки тому +49

    We had to make bricks for a school project in the 80’s in the U.K.. We were making a wall, was so much fun.

  • @xxCrimsonSpiritxx
    @xxCrimsonSpiritxx 3 роки тому +2

    this channel is one of the most positive, wholesome, real and useful channels out there on YT if not the most

  • @asonjarossa2023
    @asonjarossa2023 Рік тому +6

    Once I get out on my own, I'm going to get my own thing of land and start living like this, it looks so fun. I love admiring history and even experiencing it first-hand. If there are any events out there in the US that does this kind of stuff, I want to be the first to join

    • @elizabethclaiborne6461
      @elizabethclaiborne6461 7 місяців тому +1

      It’s called re enactment. There’s plenty of museum based events doing this. I was a docent in an 1840’s kitchen. Nothing changed from what Townsends cooks. I learned a skill set too.
      Working this hard with no power tools can wreck you, nobody mentions that carpenters and blacksmiths usually wound up in bad shape before power tools. The work literally wears your body out. Barn raisings and quilting bees, etc exist because it takes a lot of people to do the work. Be reasonable in your expectations.

  • @abadatha
    @abadatha 3 роки тому +59

    One of the best videos you've put out in a while, and I thought the billows was impressive.

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +16

      Thank you so much. We had a lot of fun making this video.

    • @paulwilliams4274
      @paulwilliams4274 3 роки тому +1

      @@townsends Great video! Please tell me this new series ends with making a brick house!!!

  • @samuelanstey340
    @samuelanstey340 3 роки тому +30

    I think this is the most modern looking outfit he's got if he wore this down town no one would bat a eye compared to his other outfits

  • @barbaraepley7032
    @barbaraepley7032 8 місяців тому

    Several years ago I found your channel and have enjoyed it enormously. Recently my husband, who wasn't as interested back then in such things has become a fan of yours as well. We now enjoy watching the old timey way of life, seeing as the modern way is falling to pieces these days. Thank you for your videos. God bless.

  • @glowiever
    @glowiever 3 роки тому

    my grandma used to make earthwares at home. bricks, pottery, jugs. I love watching them drying in the sun

  • @UpcycleElectronics
    @UpcycleElectronics 3 роки тому +14

    6:03
    - That!
    That's why this channel is so great. On top of the interesting subject, writing, concise presentation, and consistent theme; the creative videography and exceptional editing really make the channel great. Kudos to everyone involved for staying creative and fresh with a static subject.
    -Jake

  • @jeofbrinclhof7861
    @jeofbrinclhof7861 3 роки тому +29

    Ooo I'm excited for the permanent builds. Ready to learn :)

  • @GlazeonthewickeR
    @GlazeonthewickeR 2 роки тому +1

    Man, this channel rules. Has brought me so much peace over the past few weeks especially.

  • @juliuscaesarplotena3860
    @juliuscaesarplotena3860 Рік тому +2

    It's amazing. Simply amazing skill. As if all my worries and troubles just pop out when I watch your videos. You are some sort of happy working group of people committed to a natural environment. Keep on going Jon. It's history!

  • @cybernoob101
    @cybernoob101 3 роки тому +32

    Wow this was one of the best videos you have came out with ! very interesting to see the home stead progress

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +8

      Thanks so much! More to come.

  • @EnglishCountryLife
    @EnglishCountryLife 3 роки тому +6

    A truly outstanding series. Television producers should commission a series from this, it's both more entertaining and more educational than almost anything on TV

  • @lucasm9172
    @lucasm9172 2 роки тому +1

    The brick mold shot was great

  • @mysteriousghoul5918
    @mysteriousghoul5918 2 роки тому

    This channel is very entertaining. I work the graveyard shift and this channel makes the time go by so fast.

  • @loganl3746
    @loganl3746 3 роки тому +287

    We need a Townsend and Primitive Technology crossover for this haha

    • @jonanderson5137
      @jonanderson5137 3 роки тому +20

      There it is, I knew someone else would think of PT.
      He needs to show Jack the special bricks to bake first.

    • @NastyMagic
      @NastyMagic 3 роки тому +8

      That would be the best anime Crossover ever. Yes, everything is anime.

    • @glorygloryholeallelujah
      @glorygloryholeallelujah 3 роки тому +3

      YES!!
      That was my immediate thought too!!!!
      😆❤️

    • @buckaroobonzai2909
      @buckaroobonzai2909 2 роки тому +9

      He'd be all like... talking to him about bricks and stuff, and the other guy would be just shirtless and doing stuff.

    • @ricardomilos3464
      @ricardomilos3464 2 роки тому +2

      PT is fake.

  • @AntarcticAssasin
    @AntarcticAssasin 3 роки тому +101

    One of the coolest parts of Assassin's Creed is seeing people going about authentic daily tasks. In the latest, Odyssey, some of my favorite locations are the brick factories and olive oil presses. There's even a dedicated educational mode to play with guided tours of these locations describing what's going on. Very cool to see it here in real life.

    • @sinamos3945
      @sinamos3945 3 роки тому +2

      Go outside.

    • @sinamos3945
      @sinamos3945 2 роки тому +1

      @@tynj4173 Life is a video game.

    • @technounionrepresentative4274
      @technounionrepresentative4274 2 роки тому +7

      @@sinamos3945 you and I must have drastically different ideas of what life is

    • @TheFrugalMombot
      @TheFrugalMombot 2 роки тому +1

      I love that many games like this, minecraft, and many others have learning modes and have authentic historical representations to help teach kids as they play online.

    • @estebansantana6065
      @estebansantana6065 2 роки тому

      J

  • @brandonletzko4239
    @brandonletzko4239 3 роки тому

    There is something satisfying about hard work and making something by hand. I could live like this and be happy. Of course, I will still need to have a way to watch Townsends.

  • @holdshiftt2run308
    @holdshiftt2run308 2 роки тому +1

    The kids like her that do these things are also learning some important skills while learning and developing themselves with work.

  • @montanatony5838
    @montanatony5838 3 роки тому +8

    I freakin love this channel so much, it makes my day when they pop up...
    No hateful rhetoric, no politricks and no racial mutter...
    Thanks so much Townsends for making such good material and may the family be blessed..
    The daughter sure has grown to a beautiful young lady you should be very proud that she enjoys your pastime as much as you.

  • @erinhowett3630
    @erinhowett3630 3 роки тому +138

    Is the clay harvested from the property?

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +141

      Yup! Right next to our work table.

    • @erinhowett3630
      @erinhowett3630 3 роки тому +29

      @@townsends Very cool!

    • @drsch
      @drsch 3 роки тому +38

      I think the word "Indiana" is Native American for "Digging here sucks because the whole state is clay" :)

    • @WelshWebb
      @WelshWebb 3 роки тому +1

      @@drsch No, that's here in Michigan!

  • @ChasenR
    @ChasenR 2 роки тому +2

    As someone who works in a modern day brick plant. Its good to see a lot has changed from back in the day. We still call stacks of bricks, hacks. Other than that most of the process has been automated with human assistance. The only part of the plant I work at that isnt completely automated is where they do quality control on fired bricks. Packaging sorts through the hacks of bricks, throwing the broken ones onto a belt that takes them to a recycling truck. Afterwards theyre cubed up, and strapped by robots, and forklifts stack the cubes outside to be loaded on semis.

  • @juliuscaesarplotena3860
    @juliuscaesarplotena3860 Рік тому +1

    It's quiet interesting now. Because last week,I dug a soil hole in the farm. And about a meter deep, sticky mud appears and bring some at home, start some UA-cam research on how to make bricks. And that's when I stumbled right across your blog. Your blog is amazing. The way you express the story of brick making. It fascinates and resonates me. Thumbs up. I'm excited to join in your team now.

  • @hobbitdude13
    @hobbitdude13 3 роки тому +16

    6:30 just fades back into the Skyrim intro

  • @billydee6103
    @billydee6103 3 роки тому +12

    That incredible feeling when you get knocked unconscious by a loaf of clay from Jas Townsend

  • @romanuslureaus2176
    @romanuslureaus2176 2 роки тому +1

    This is premium UA-cam content right here. Interesting process, nice explanations and storytelling, and great filmography.

  • @interstellarconveyance4865
    @interstellarconveyance4865 3 роки тому +1

    You and your friends are terrific! Thank you for helping to preserve these early settler skills. S0 much to learn and absorb! Thank you.
    Hearts, Fractal

  • @dwaynewladyka577
    @dwaynewladyka577 3 роки тому +22

    Thank you so much for your excellent quality and wholesome content. I learn so much from watching these videos. Cheers!

    • @townsends
      @townsends  3 роки тому +7

      Our pleasure!

    • @dwaynewladyka577
      @dwaynewladyka577 3 роки тому +2

      @@townsends In the future, can you tell us how mortar was made? Thanks!

    • @rosemcguinn5301
      @rosemcguinn5301 3 роки тому +2

      Hi there Dwayne!

    • @dwaynewladyka577
      @dwaynewladyka577 3 роки тому +2

      @@rosemcguinn5301 Hello, Rose! 👋✌️

    • @HealthyandLovingLife
      @HealthyandLovingLife 3 роки тому +4

      I love the wholesome content. In a world where everyone seems to be angry with everyone else, this is a nice stark contrast. It makes me happy.

  • @jps30
    @jps30 3 роки тому +56

    Need a class on locating building materials, how to find the best wood and clay.

    • @josiahtheblacksmith467
      @josiahtheblacksmith467 3 роки тому +9

      I could set up a pottery shop with all the clay in my back yard lol. My town actually used to have a brick factory and a clay mining pit

    • @grennhald
      @grennhald 3 роки тому

      We have a dearth of clay around here. Have to drive a few hours west to find bedrock.

    • @josiahtheblacksmith467
      @josiahtheblacksmith467 3 роки тому +5

      @@grennhald clay is very useful to have available..... Until you are trying to grow a garden.

    • @JessieHTX
      @JessieHTX 3 роки тому +2

      So much clay where I live. When I was a kid, I would dig some out of the yard to play with. :)

    • @josiahtheblacksmith467
      @josiahtheblacksmith467 3 роки тому +2

      @@grennhald maybe you could find someone that has clay available and you can trade for some if you have a use for it. Lots of videos online of how to separate clay from soil, might be surprised how much clay could be mixed into your soil. Otherwise if you have no use for it then be thankful you don't have to deal with it in the yard or garden, very difficult to deal with for gardening

  • @justaguyandhissilver4893
    @justaguyandhissilver4893 3 роки тому

    I live all your videos. In a time when the world is in chaos, and everyone spending all their time hating each other, these videos on the history of our skills, techniques, cooking etc, are perfect for some no politics good time history lesson.

  • @falconmollett3581
    @falconmollett3581 2 роки тому +1

    That shot from the brick mold was masterful.

  • @northernembersoutdoors1045
    @northernembersoutdoors1045 3 роки тому +5

    This is my favourite channel on UA-cam. Positive, educational, proud and fun. Thanks again for another fantastic video 👍👍😎😎

  • @SteveVi0lence
    @SteveVi0lence 3 роки тому +114

    Being Mexican-American, this is the same way my parents enlist help in making tamales.

    • @romannumeralfive810
      @romannumeralfive810 3 роки тому +13

      Cooking as a big group is part of a lot of cultures, bierocks for Germany (and surrounding areas), Makki roti in India, etc

    • @romannumeralfive810
      @romannumeralfive810 3 роки тому +25

      Explains his familial knowledge of a cooking practice - why does it matter that he mentioned it?

    • @lolinpinguin
      @lolinpinguin 3 роки тому +22

      Derva Kommt von hinten it’s relative because making tamales, like bricks, is a constructive process that requires an assembly line

    • @SteveVi0lence
      @SteveVi0lence 3 роки тому +9

      @@lolinpinguin thank you. Family is important :)

    • @chinaforlaughs9509
      @chinaforlaughs9509 3 роки тому

      Build the wall

  • @roseknightmare
    @roseknightmare 2 роки тому +1

    Finally the joy of pug (clay) farming. There are a lot of choices you are using that even the pioneers would have balked at. Great job.

  • @dojusticelovemercy1
    @dojusticelovemercy1 3 роки тому +11

    In a world that’s grown so hostile and divided, not to mention we’re all socially distancing, your channel is a much needed relief. Thank you so much! This channel has been a blessing to me during the pandemic.

  • @Bayan1905
    @Bayan1905 3 роки тому +6

    I have a brick that was used in a blast furnace that was built in 1847, you can see it's not exactly 100% uniform like it would be today and you can see it was made the old fashioned way. Amazing that the blast furnace still stands today after 170 plus years with it's original bricks and stone construction. A testament to the skills of the people back then who were able to make structures that seem to last longer than new prefab homes.

  • @jessiegrider529
    @jessiegrider529 3 роки тому +3

    I visited Hempstead county Arkansas. Old Washington. I saw the historical reenactment of war. The cannons were blasting gunpowder to simulate the loud sound and smell of it. The sound goes right through me. I wanted to cry thinking of young soldiers as young as 14 going through that. The 90 year old lady they had giving part of the tour was so sweet and knowledgeable. There was one home where several young men worked. They made bricks then slept on the floor when they could get a break. It was very hot that day. The guides said imagine making bricks in this weather. The clay dried out the skin. They had to drink plenty of water or they'd dehydrate. It was very hard on the feet. They were so tired after they could sleep on the floor. Some if the buildings were made using no nails and still stand today. There was a herbalist and I asked about the medicines. Most of the herbs I was familiar with but they also had some dried out okra seeds and said it was good medicine. Then there was a wall painted to look like wall paper and logs and marble. When you walk in you don't notice it is all painted that way, it does look quite real from afar. It is all interesting. I liked the giant magnolia tree the best, the states largest. It is a nice day trip. Younger kids and those not too interested in history may be bored looking at old buildings and stuff. Some people brought children and dogs to the war reenactment. I don't recommend that. It is too loud and they can't enjoy it or understand. But adults or history buffs could enjoy the day there.

  • @mrmikerotch
    @mrmikerotch 3 роки тому

    I look away for a couple of years and come back where the production value has shot through the roof.

  • @cjxgraphics
    @cjxgraphics 3 роки тому +1

    Growing up in Louisiana, we've done trips to antebellum homes, where they talked about brick making, but I've never seen it done before!
    Also, I've seen brick molds in various places over the years, but I never knew what they were.
    Man I love this channel!

  • @Tygearianus
    @Tygearianus 3 роки тому +18

    No one gunna comment on the quality of that sweet sweet camera work? Great job with the brick mould POV!

    • @keepermovin5906
      @keepermovin5906 3 роки тому

      Kind of reminds me of the beginning of “lord of war”

  • @charlesehmke8403
    @charlesehmke8403 3 роки тому +3

    I'm really glad to see you have your daughter out there helping.

  • @JW-zx5dr
    @JW-zx5dr 2 роки тому

    I’m glad I’ve found this channel again, not seen it in almost a year

  • @sbdiaries
    @sbdiaries 4 місяці тому

    Thanks guys for sharing😀 the account of brick making by hand ❤.
    Such a great team effort 👌 best wishes Simon and Beth ❤🙋

  • @madcat789
    @madcat789 3 роки тому +27

    This is the content I subscribe for.

  • @octavianm3166
    @octavianm3166 3 роки тому +4

    1:52 poor girl got blasted with sand! Thank you Townsends for the awesome homestead videos that take me back into American history.

  • @ST0AT
    @ST0AT 9 місяців тому +1

    This channel is like what if Primitive Technology entered a new era in Civ

  • @atlantic_love
    @atlantic_love Рік тому

    We're travelling to Massachusetts tomorrow! I've lived there twice, but hubby is from England and so he's really going to like this :)