Magic, it is said, is not tricking people with cleverness; but putting so much effort into a task that no one would ever believe that it could possibly be a trick.
Do you know how long I was googling "dye drying works" "Victorian dye drying works" "ancient dye drying works" "ancient victorian dye hut" etc??? You totally got me
This was a very clever April fool, it took me two watches before the penny dropped, and I think that was thanks to your your deadpan delivery and that brilliant ‘old’ engineering drawing. The cleverest April fools are ones that are nearly believable and this was just that. Thank you for lightening the day!
🤣Just finished looking at some old railway goods yard turntables on old Ordnance Survey maps (Bingley and Wolverhampton in particular) and this video appeared as a recommendation. Then was scratching my head, a turntable viewing tower? 🤣 Awesome creativity and craftsmanship.
Thank you for the entertaining daftness, and for this follow-up video! And I'm quite chuffed that you quoted one of my comments as being one that you appreciated.
LMAO! That was so funny... I was chuckling this morning and almost spilled my coffee, what a hoot! Definitely make modeling fun. Like the way you pulled the whole thing off. The coolest thing is how you applied your creative genius to pull it off, very cool!
I thought at first it was YOU what had been taken in by a perfectly typical Victorian April Fool's joke. There I was thinking "Poor Michael, great modeller, lousy researcher", and then didn't wait for the outro. What a relief. I can still rely on your research.
I twigged when I saw the turntable observer's tower that "something" was afoot. But the whole idea of a dye drier was so plausible I gave you the benefit of the doubt until the calendar forced "April 1" into my consciousness and the light bulb exploded.
I saved it to watch later - I’m a sucker for April fools, but with the cover blown “I won’t be fooled again” PS was that a bottle of Springbank on you’re top shelf - I’ll be round for a wee dram later (it’s the best - well after Penderyn!! Cheers Jeff
Ha, ha, what a donkey. I watched the video 4 times before I convinced myself that it was suss. It was like something out of the Scratch build section of The Great Model Railway Challenge. Nice one Michael.
Had me going too! What made it even more believable was that I'm a town nearby there is the remains of a Georgian or victorian building, where only the front face wall was left standing, and it bore a vaguely similar style to your dye drying works. i never knew its purpose but when I saw your extra slim building I thought "hold on, was that one of those?" 😅
I watched this and thought I don't remember those details of the dye drying works. And then I remembered. I had sat down to watch it, dozed off and then had to leap up and do something else. I failed to get back to it so I missed the joke. Bother!
I was one that bambusald but not harm no foul. Part of what sold it for me is I live and in the USA and don't know much about Great Britain. I did keep saying to myself that it was an awfully thin building but what do I know I am not from there. The rest of the back story help sell as well. Thank you bring a smile to my face and for the hard work do in producing videos for real or fake buildings.
I enjoyed the 1 April video, but really like this one showing how you pulled off the charade. The recreation of period drawings was extremely interesting to me.
I’ll put my hands up to this, and admit I was taken in, even though I thought the similarities between building and cassette too much of a coincidence. The ironic part of me believing this? In the eighties, I worked in an ex dye works building, that was typical of any late Victorian red brick industrial building of that era🙄🙄🙄
You may have opened a can of worms with this; "Fantasy Buildings We'd Like To See." Brilliant! And now, for a "Can Of Worms Canning Factory, circa 1878".
The turntable observation tower had the aroma of rodent but the dye drying building I took at face value. Which was pretty much it’s one dimension. A Swann Morton No3 cut above Michael
I did wonder, especially when I saw the date so prominently displayed in the video, and the depth of the building didn't add up at all, but I then wondered if it was the facade of a former building the had been given the "Chandwell Treatment" and the rear had been demolished so it kind of made sense then. I now sincerely hope you get an itch on (or in) a part of your anatomy that you cannot reach 😂😂😂
Hilariously genius😀😀 Also superb use of card modelling and AI. What worries me is when AI gets too good, politicians will be able to lie even more than they already do!😳😲😲
Got me! Hook, line and sinker. Can I ever again trust anything this man says. Although, in my defence, we are used to trick buildings in London (check out 23-24 Leinster Gardens). Not sure if they had tape casettes in the 1860s when the Metropolitan Railway built these. Well done Michael. I'll be ready for you next year!
Doh! I met my friend in Hebden Bridge and was telling her about these thinking it was real! The only confusion I had was if that was the only article you had about one, how did you know they had all been demolished? My only defence is I was suspicious enough to check the time the video was posted and thought it was in the afternoon 😐 great work on the building though 👍
I went back to the original video and ..... I got trapped by the magic of your modelling skills. Did not see one of the clues you gave ... Not even the really weird obsevation platform for a turntable. I thought the best comment was "ooohoo" or "YouHoo" . I was wrong I thought the patent for the glue had been bought to England by August's sister April. But I do have a suggestion. Perhaps if the Building could be used for another purpose it may be saved. A Starbucks was suggested. The required extention could be of ??? I dont know I'm just not that creative.
Being old enough to know better, Even in this episode having missed the first, I am embarrassed to say I did not listeni n immediately. But I suppose we can blame It on my age considering I still have an 8-track mind, Which it turns out not to be a good thing. Jumping from one project to another without actually starting at the beginning, ending up somewhere in the middle project, trying to get to the beginning of another. All the while, wishing I could just get to the beginning of my favorite project, Instead of getting side tracked, 8-tracked, By all the others. 😢 😂
I have to admit, i figured it was an april fools joke in the first 5 minutes as soon as i saw the tape shape of the building But its probably more to do with the fact i am from yorkshire, we would build something dafter 😂 (for context i was reccomended that video 2 months after April first ....i have no date context 😂 )
Michael Thanks for a great update and a real, ‘Behind the Curtain’ moment of how you both do things and the effort you put in behind the scenes.I sort of guess you might have a 1st April funny video up your sleeve by your comments o& been delayed and lack of real members update. But I thought it would be good to play along. For the non Uk Viewers we have along tradition of April Fools day jokes in all forms of Media, one of the most famous been the BBC 1957 Spaghetti Harvest narrated by Sir Richard Dimbleby. In my comments I used the phrase Loof Lirpa or Lirpa Loof which if read the letter right to left spell April Fool or Fool April, which has used many times with these sort of jokes. So I had the idea of how to comment depend on what Michael showed. Yes I did find an Austin Mitchell Book from the early 1970’s which was a Yorkshire Joke Book so thought quoting with the Loof Lirpa phrase was idea. The railway one is from April 1986 when a Uk Magazine Rail Enthusiast said a locomotive 31 200 had been named Railtour Express with photos of loco with it new name other magazines fell for this the even reporting this, later a photo with name plate upside down appeared in print. Great Update Michael. Ian
You may think no one constructed something so narrow but apparently when Liverpool docks was being renovated they demolished a listed warehouse near to the Grade 1 listed Albert Docks and had to repair/rebuild the ornate frontage so your 'dye drying works could have feasibly existed. Excellent leg pull and great modelling as usual, wish I had your abilities.
Other narrow buildings. There is a bridge over one of the London railways that has a fake frontage to carry on the rows of terraced housing across the bridge. The buildings are only a few feet inside, possible to keep them structurally sound.
Magic, it is said, is not tricking people with cleverness; but putting so much effort into a task that no one would ever believe that it could possibly be a trick.
Thank you. I loved making this.
I fell for it. You'll be hearing from my solicitors in the morning...
:)
Do you know how long I was googling "dye drying works" "Victorian dye drying works" "ancient dye drying works" "ancient victorian dye hut" etc???
You totally got me
And me, hook, like and sinker.
Hahah! Brilliant.
Got me, hook, line and sinker… you do deadpan faultlessly!
Yay! Hahah Thanks for sharing!
As I said on the original, for a throw away prank, the level of modelling is still such a high quality.
Thank you!
Whether playing an April Fools prank or modeling Station Road in Chandwell, your InkScape skills are amazing!
Thank you!
Best April Fool's prank I've ever seen! And, I fell for it as well!
Yay! Thank you for sharing!
This was a very clever April fool, it took me two watches before the penny dropped, and I think that was thanks to your your deadpan delivery and that brilliant ‘old’ engineering drawing.
The cleverest April fools are ones that are nearly believable and this was just that. Thank you for lightening the day!
Thank you!
🤣Just finished looking at some old railway goods yard turntables on old Ordnance Survey maps (Bingley and Wolverhampton in particular) and this video appeared as a recommendation. Then was scratching my head, a turntable viewing tower? 🤣
Awesome creativity and craftsmanship.
Thank you
Brilliant. I fell for it. but was baffled how it would operate. But then the Industrial North is a strange foreign world for us down South 😁
Oh yeah. Dahn sarf they’d make it much deeper.
Thank you for the entertaining daftness, and for this follow-up video! And I'm quite chuffed that you quoted one of my comments as being one that you appreciated.
You did make me laugh.
Best April Fool ever. I was googling drying works for a while before I realised!!
Superb!
I'm still chuckling about this. Glad I gave you a worry - it's just payback for tricking me in the first place. 😂
Hahah! It was a good comment too!
LMAO! That was so funny... I was chuckling this morning and almost spilled my coffee, what a hoot! Definitely make modeling fun.
Like the way you pulled the whole thing off. The coolest thing is how you applied your creative genius to pull it off, very cool!
Glad you enjoyed it!
I thought at first it was YOU what had been taken in by a perfectly typical Victorian April Fool's joke. There I was thinking "Poor Michael, great modeller, lousy researcher", and then didn't wait for the outro. What a relief. I can still rely on your research.
Good one!
Yes Michael, That was a real hoot ! 😊
Lots of fun.
I twigged when I saw the turntable observer's tower that "something" was afoot. But the whole idea of a dye drier was so plausible I gave you the benefit of the doubt until the calendar forced "April 1" into my consciousness and the light bulb exploded.
😃😀
I saved it to watch later - I’m a sucker for April fools, but with the cover blown “I won’t be fooled again” PS was that a bottle of Springbank on you’re top shelf - I’ll be round for a wee dram later (it’s the best - well after Penderyn!! Cheers Jeff
Springbank was not up on that shelf but there were some special ones up there.
Ha, ha, what a donkey. I watched the video 4 times before I convinced myself that it was suss. It was like something out of the Scratch build section of The Great Model Railway Challenge. Nice one Michael.
Glad you enjoyed it
Had me going too! What made it even more believable was that I'm a town nearby there is the remains of a Georgian or victorian building, where only the front face wall was left standing, and it bore a vaguely similar style to your dye drying works. i never knew its purpose but when I saw your extra slim building I thought "hold on, was that one of those?" 😅
Did it look like a cassette tape? I have a suspicion that it probably did. 🤣
Thank you!
I watched this and thought I don't remember those details of the dye drying works. And then I remembered. I had sat down to watch it, dozed off and then had to leap up and do something else. I failed to get back to it so I missed the joke. Bother!
Hahah oops!
Great follow up video Michael. Well done. Roy.
Thanks Roy!
I was one that bambusald but not harm no foul. Part of what sold it for me is I live and in the USA and don't know much about Great Britain. I did keep saying to myself that it was an awfully thin building but what do I know I am not from there. The rest of the back story help sell as well. Thank you bring a smile to my face and for the hard work do in producing videos for real or fake buildings.
Good stuff!
You guys pranks deserved to be successful as you had put so much effort into them. Well done indeed. Arthur
Thanks Arthur!
Pffft! You made the Easter bunny cry with this one.!
Hahaha! Oh dear.
I enjoyed the 1 April video, but really like this one showing how you pulled off the charade. The recreation of period drawings was extremely interesting to me.
Thank you so much 😀
That is brilliant-so creative! Thank you! 😊
Thank you! 😊
You got me. I think it was well presented enough to work just right. I had thought it odd it never really got placed in your layout.
😀
Before I caught on, I was wondering why build it so narrow. That was a good one you played on us!
😂
I'm glad someone else pointed out that it's yoohoo. I've known it as that for 55 years. Officials wear yooniforms, not ooniforms 😁
Hahah that is true. But we shelter under umbrellas not yoombrellas!
It’s definitely Uhu. Not Uhu. That’s just ridiculous
I was completely taken in!!
Never spotted the clues.
Yes! :)
I’ll put my hands up to this, and admit I was taken in, even though I thought the similarities between building and cassette too much of a coincidence.
The ironic part of me believing this?
In the eighties, I worked in an ex dye works building, that was typical of any late Victorian red brick industrial building of that era🙄🙄🙄
Brilliant! Thank you for sharing!
You may have opened a can of worms with this; "Fantasy Buildings We'd Like To See." Brilliant! And now, for a "Can Of Worms Canning Factory, circa 1878".
Haha yeah
That was a good one!
😂
Now I really, REALLY want to make a cutaway model of some Victorian dye drying works to show the interior :D
Maybe next April!?
@@Chandwell maybe even sooner :D
The turntable observation tower had the aroma of rodent but the dye drying building I took at face value. Which was pretty much it’s one dimension. A Swann Morton No3 cut above Michael
Hahah thank you!
Curses! I was taken in. I even Googled it to find out more. 🙄
Thank you for sharing!
Great prank 😂
Thanks!
😂 nice one well done 👍
Thanks 😆
Very good 😂😂😂, I’m to busy working on mine I just took it for granted.
Nice 👍
I did wonder, especially when I saw the date so prominently displayed in the video, and the depth of the building didn't add up at all, but I then wondered if it was the facade of a former building the had been given the "Chandwell Treatment" and the rear had been demolished so it kind of made sense then. I now sincerely hope you get an itch on (or in) a part of your anatomy that you cannot reach 😂😂😂
😂😂😂
Hilariously genius😀😀
Also superb use of card modelling and AI.
What worries me is when AI gets too good, politicians will be able to lie even more than they already do!😳😲😲
Hahah indeed!
@@Chandwell 😲😲🤭🤭😀😀
You should add it to Chandwell!
Back-side on it could work as a low-relief or of a mill I think.
Of course I was mistaken with my comment in the previous video. The facade is strangely looking like the facade of the cottage in Taskmaster.
Oh yeah it does!
Got me! Hook, line and sinker. Can I ever again trust anything this man says. Although, in my defence, we are used to trick buildings in London (check out 23-24 Leinster Gardens). Not sure if they had tape casettes in the 1860s when the Metropolitan Railway built these. Well done Michael. I'll be ready for you next year!
Thank you! Lots of fun this one. I love those fake fronts in London.
Well I feel like a complete plonker.
I hope you see the funny side!??
@@Chandwell 100%...I am glad I was not the only one googling to find the references...tee hee
Doh! I met my friend in Hebden Bridge and was telling her about these thinking it was real! The only confusion I had was if that was the only article you had about one, how did you know they had all been demolished? My only defence is I was suspicious enough to check the time the video was posted and thought it was in the afternoon 😐 great work on the building though 👍
Hahah brilliant! Thank you for sharing!
I'm embarrassed to say I never noticed, although in my defence I watchied it just before bed.. oh dear, oh deary me...I'll get my coat.
Brilliant!
Well you fooled me completely, but in my defense my knowledge of obscure Victorian-age structures is close to zero.
😂🤔
harmless fun
Indeed
good vid on channel keep up the good vids
Thanks, you too!
oohoo is the correct pronunciation , it is the german word for owl
Yes! :)
Can you link this newbie to Adrian's one please?
Adrian doesn't have a UA-cam channel. He just posted his pictures in a few Facebook groups.
@@Chandwell That makes sense. You gave enough info that I was pretty sure my searches would have found it, if it was on here.
Thanks!
Wasn't Dye Drying a launderette in Wales?
Love it!
I went back to the original video and ..... I got trapped by the magic of your modelling skills.
Did not see one of the clues you gave ... Not even the really weird obsevation platform for a turntable. I thought the best comment was "ooohoo" or "YouHoo" . I was wrong I thought the patent for the glue had been bought to England by August's sister April.
But I do have a suggestion. Perhaps if the Building could be used for another purpose it may be saved. A Starbucks was suggested. The required extention could be of ??? I dont know I'm just not that creative.
Glass ???
Yeah that's a good idea, but for now, I like it sitting on the shelf behind me.
A corking video sir!
Thank you!
Being old enough to know better, Even in this episode having missed the first, I am embarrassed to say I did not listeni n immediately. But I suppose we can blame It on my age considering I still have an 8-track mind, Which it turns out not to be a good thing. Jumping from one project to another without actually starting at the beginning, ending up somewhere in the middle project, trying to get to the beginning of another. All the while, wishing I could just get to the beginning of my favorite project, Instead of getting side tracked, 8-tracked, By all the others. 😢 😂
I know that feeling.
I have to admit, i figured it was an april fools joke in the first 5 minutes as soon as i saw the tape shape of the building
But its probably more to do with the fact i am from yorkshire, we would build something dafter 😂
(for context i was reccomended that video 2 months after April first ....i have no date context 😂 )
Haha hope you enjoyed it though!
Are you going to raffle it off or have a competition for it ? I think it looks great and would love the chance to win it.
That’s a cool idea but I really like the piece myself and am keeping it on a shelf for now.
😂
😂
If it was turned into Starbucks would they be serving skinny lattes?
Hahaha yes
🤦♂️😂😂
😂🎉
I really fell for that ! Brilliantly planned and executed. Loved it.👏👏
Britney Scroggins is real though, isnt she?
I don't believe anything anymore...
Oh yes!!
Michael Thanks for a great update and a real, ‘Behind the Curtain’ moment of how you both do things and the effort you put in behind the scenes.I sort of guess you might have a 1st April funny video up your sleeve by your comments o& been delayed and lack of real members update. But I thought it would be good to play along. For the non Uk Viewers we have along tradition of April Fools day jokes in all forms of Media, one of the most famous been the BBC 1957 Spaghetti Harvest narrated by Sir Richard Dimbleby. In my comments I used the phrase Loof Lirpa or Lirpa Loof which if read the letter right to left spell April Fool or Fool April, which has used many times with these sort of jokes. So I had the idea of how to comment depend on what Michael showed. Yes I did find an Austin Mitchell Book from the early 1970’s which was a Yorkshire Joke Book so thought quoting with the Loof Lirpa phrase was idea. The railway one is from April 1986 when a Uk Magazine Rail Enthusiast said a locomotive 31 200 had been named Railtour Express with photos of loco with it new name other magazines fell for this the even reporting this, later a photo with name plate upside down appeared in print. Great Update Michael. Ian
Thanks Ian!
You may think no one constructed something so narrow but apparently when Liverpool docks was being renovated they demolished a listed warehouse near to the Grade 1 listed Albert Docks and had to repair/rebuild the ornate frontage so your 'dye drying works could have feasibly existed. Excellent leg pull and great modelling as usual, wish I had your abilities.
Other narrow buildings. There is a bridge over one of the London railways that has a fake frontage to carry on the rows of terraced housing across the bridge. The buildings are only a few feet inside, possible to keep them structurally sound.
Great stuff!