Ivy's Livestream! - Live in the Nutmeg Tavern
Townsends
0:00 This is how you do it, right?
0:02 That's not [music] too much, is it?
0:04 All right.
0:04 Uh welcome everyone into the Nutmeg Tavern.
0:07 I am your host today and I am not [music] John Townsend.
0:10 Um happy April late Fools' Day.
0:13 Um we decided today that because for April Fools'
0:17 we were going to switch things around in the tavern.
0:20 So, I am Ivy Yorka.
0:23 Sorry.
0:23 Sorry.
0:24 And I am usually back there on the other
0:28 side of the time vortex running the live stream.
0:31 And today I am not.
0:33 Dad is doing that today and he is running the console.
0:37 Say hello, Dad.
0:38 Um I'm here, right here.
0:41 And Lauren is in the chat today as she always is.
0:45 I wanted to do something where we
0:47 switched everything around and Lauren was running
0:49 the console and uh Dad was doing the chat and I was up here,
0:54 but No, I didn't want to do that.
0:56 No one else wanted to change roles, only me.
0:59 I'm having fun, though.
1:00 Dad's having fun, though.
1:01 So, that's that's why he That's another reason why he wanted
1:05 to do this is because he didn't want to be up here today.
1:08 So, today we're talking about a few different things.
1:12 The first thing we're talking about is my recent trip that I took.
1:17 So, me and my husband recently went to Gulf Shores,
1:20 Alabama and we visited these two really awesome forts.
1:25 I would definitely recommend visiting there and they were beautiful.
1:30 Um the first one we went to was Fort Morgan.
1:34 So, it's on the coast of Alabama and it's
1:37 on a peninsula that comes out from Alabama.
1:41 It's actually really close to um Mississippi.
1:44 And then Fort Gaines is the other one that we visited.
1:49 It's across a little channel.
1:51 We actually took a ferry to get there.
1:53 That was my first time on a ferry.
1:54 It was really fun.
1:55 And then Fort Gaines is on an island.
1:59 Although, there's a bridge to it now, so it's kind of not an island anymore.
2:02 But, um Fort Morgan was my favorite.
2:05 Fort Gaines was also really cool.
2:08 Um but, Fort Morgan was my favorite and we're going to talk about them today.
2:12 Um so Dad, can you figure out the slides cuz mine What?
2:18 You can't figure it out?
2:20 I It's the buttons aren't glowy.
2:23 [laughter] Okay.
2:22 Hold on, here we go.
2:24 Um there we go.
2:26 All right.
2:26 So, this is the an overhead shot of Fort Morgan.
2:30 I didn't take this picture.
2:32 Um I don't have a drone or a helicopter to take this picture with.
2:35 Uh this is a picture I found online so
2:37 that you could get a good overhead view of Fort Morgan.
2:41 Um so you come in through it's actually really cool.
2:45 You get to come in through this little tunnel that um goes into the fort.
2:50 You can see it.
2:51 It's um the brick road leads right into it
2:55 and you walk through the little um tunnel
2:57 and then into the outer Fort Morgan and um
3:03 there's a little bridge over a little stream.
3:05 It's beautiful and then you walk into the larger
3:09 um Fort Morgan and on the inside.
3:13 So, this fort was made it was originally made they they
3:19 started the um process in around 1812 for the War of 1812.
3:27 It wasn't this fort.
3:29 It was just a little log outpost and they decided after
3:33 the war was done and that fort did well that hey,
3:36 we should build an actual fort here.
3:39 So, let's see.
3:40 It was um Let me see.
3:45 Where are my dates here?
3:46 So, construction began in 1819.
3:50 But, because it's an isolated location and also people kept getting sick.
3:54 They just kept getting sick.
3:56 Um I think it was yellow fever.
3:57 I think the first the first person that built it died and then I
4:04 think another person got sick and then passed it on to his um subordinate.
4:11 And but, it finally got finished in 1834.
4:16 And this the whole structure has 46 million cubic yards of bricks.
4:23 So, it's not 46 million bricks.
4:25 That's No.
4:26 No, it's 46 million cubic yards of bricks.
4:30 And yards aren't small.
4:32 Yards are 3 ft.
4:34 cubic feet.
4:35 A brick is cubic feet.
4:36 it's cubic yards.
4:37 So, um it's huge.
4:40 It's got a ton of bricks.
4:41 I took a lot of pictures myself and you can see those in later pictures.
4:46 So, um so here you can see So, there's the main fort area and then kind
4:52 of in the center there's that part that doesn't look right.
4:57 Mhm.
4:57 That was added.
4:59 It didn't have precise dates that I could find.
5:02 It said somewhere uh like either in the Civil
5:06 War or in World War I or World War II.
5:08 So, this fort was used all the way through World War II.
5:13 I don't think it was used a lot.
5:14 Well, okay.
5:15 I think I think that it was used I didn't write that part down.
5:24 Yeah, sometimes they just use them for training or Right.
5:27 I know that this was specifically used for training
5:31 in either World War I or World War II.
5:33 I think it was World War I and then World
5:35 War II it was kind of used a little bit.
5:38 Yeah, star forts by then are kind of out of Right.
5:43 Yeah, it's a little out of date,
5:44 but I do know it was used for training and that's why
5:47 it has and then to the right you can see other concrete structures.
5:52 That was battery one and battery two,
5:54 which were added in World War specifically for World War I, I believe.
6:00 Um mostly for just storing artillery stuff and whatnot.
6:06 That kind of war stuff.
6:07 I don't know what that is.
6:08 Um and I think you can move on to the next slide, Dad.
6:13 Okay.
6:13 Off we go.
6:14 So, this I found this in Diderot's encyclopedia.
6:19 Um this is just a uh diagram of a star fort and it,
6:24 you know, all star forts are pretty similar.
6:25 This one um is a little bit more simplified than this particular one.
6:30 And then the next slide is the actual plan
6:34 that was made in 1817 um of Fort Morgan.
6:39 So, I just loved that they had this plan and it was still intact.
6:44 Um and you can see that none of those concrete structures
6:47 were in the center there in the original plan of the fort.
6:50 more decorative than what it had to be.
6:52 It probably was.
6:53 It They they kind of are a a eyesore
6:55 compared to the rest of the fort, which is beautiful.
6:58 Um and then I think in the next slide is a picture that was taken in 1864 and I
7:07 put this picture in here because I took a picture
7:10 um that is actually from almost the exact same spot.
7:15 Um Is it the next slide, I think?
7:17 It is the next slide.
7:20 So, you can see that they are of The other
7:23 one was taken a little bit lower down, a little further back,
7:25 but it's of the same section of the fort and it hasn't obviously it's changed,
7:29 but it hasn't changed a lot.
7:31 It even has the um the little water channel that goes through it.
7:37 Um which it just It was just so pretty there.
7:41 Um [snorts] and you can keep going with the slides.
7:44 So, this is the entrance of um Fort Morgan.
7:48 That's me walking into it.
7:50 I love the idea of going into it through a tunnel.
7:52 I did.
7:52 It That was so fun.
7:55 And uh I liked it for the experience of visiting the fort.
7:59 I'm sure it had more practical purposes than just being really cool, [laughter]
8:04 but So, this is part of the original structure.
8:06 Yes, it is.
8:07 So, isn't it interesting?
8:09 When we were at um St.
8:12 Augustine, they had the entrance was like a little drawbridge.
8:17 Yeah.
8:17 And you were elevated over this.
8:19 In this one they decided to sink it through the tunnel.
8:23 on the lower level.
8:24 Right.
8:26 Okay.
8:28 That's me looking out from the fort.
8:29 Behind me you can see the concrete structures that have been added in later.
8:35 It looks like they must use pretty decent brick.
8:37 Yeah, I mean it still looks in great condition.
8:40 Yeah.
8:42 Of course, they don't have the freezing and thawing, so Yeah, that would help.
8:48 helps.
8:47 And this is the outside.
8:50 This is the outside of the inside, if that makes any sense.
8:53 [laughter] Um so, it's like there was the big outside that you had
8:57 to walk the through the tunnel to and then you walked into this area,
9:01 which is still the outside of the fort,
9:03 but the inner fort is the part with all the bricks in it.
9:10 Mhm.
9:09 So, this I thought it was really cool.
9:12 All the water comes down and it drips through the bricks and it
9:17 forms stalactites and stalagmites They have a little cave in the wall.
9:22 It's like a cave, but it's um but with bricks.
9:25 And it this it the whole building is filled with this.
9:30 Um it um tons and tons of arches with the beautiful
9:36 brick and that it it was it was beautiful there.
9:40 And impressive, really.
9:41 very impressive.
9:42 Do you remember the picture we have of the main fort?
9:45 Yes.
9:45 Yeah.
9:46 Where Where it looks very much like this picture,
9:49 but like Mom and Sydney and me when when Sydney and I were like eight and 10,
9:55 somewhere around in there.
9:56 We're actually a little younger, actually.
9:58 Um and we're we're standing at in different arches.
10:01 So Mom's like in the furthest back arch and then Sydney and then me.
10:05 And then we had recreated it like about 5 years ago at one of our trips.
10:09 Very And like it's always so beautiful to see these older architectural pieces
10:13 and they they I I'm not sure that like it's a very practical building,
10:17 but they turned out beautifully.
10:19 Right.
10:19 And this is 200 years old, some of it.
10:23 Yeah.
10:26 So this was a structure that I didn't know what it was at first.
10:31 I had to read the little sign.
10:33 Um and [snorts] this is I'm not exactly sure what you call the structure itself.
10:40 It's an oven.
10:41 It's just Yeah, it's it's an oven, but it's an oven for cannonballs.
10:45 Yes, it's a hot shot oven.
10:47 Yes.
10:48 And this is um so you put the cannonballs in and then
10:53 it it's heated up to very hot temperatures and then they come out.
10:57 And this was right next to where some of the um uh the cannons were
11:03 positioned and it was specifically for um
11:08 for um burning through the hulls of wooden ships.
11:17 Mhm.
11:16 So at St.
11:17 Augustine they had exactly the same kind of oven.
11:21 Was this one inside the No, this one was outside the Well, yeah.
11:26 Same thing at St.
11:27 Augustine.
11:27 It's outside of this the main construction.
11:31 So.
11:31 Which I wasn't sure how they transported
11:33 the burning hot cannonballs to the cannons.
11:37 They had They've got um special I have like ice tongs,
11:42 a special holder that you would grab them all.
11:45 And and I'm sure even when they're 3 ft away from you
11:48 they were still still still don't want to be close to them,
11:50 especially since it's hot there already.
11:52 Yeah, exactly.
11:53 So I've got a couple questions.
11:54 Yes.
11:55 Um could you recap How long did it take?
11:57 It's they started it in 1819 and they finished it in 1834.
12:02 Okay.
12:02 So it took quite some years.
12:06 Yeah.
12:06 It took a long time and that was dying.
12:08 Yep, yes, people kept dying and also it's it's on a peninsula,
12:13 so it's kind of hard to get to unless you know,
12:18 it's now and there's lots of Yeah.
12:20 um and there's lots of roads that get to it.
12:25 There's only one one road that gets to it.
12:27 And I'm also sure that it flooded multiple times and um because when we were
12:34 coming along um there was a seawall that went uh along the um the inner side?
12:46 The outer side, I think.
12:50 Yeah, it came along the outer side.
12:51 Yeah, I imagine a storm could come along
12:53 and sort of try to melt your building away.
12:57 Yeah.
12:58 Which I was kind of surprised Well,
13:00 you were driving along and all of the buildings were on stilts.
13:04 Every single one of them along the whole area, they were all on stilts.
13:09 Well, So this last week we had tons and tons of rain,
13:12 more than we normally get and it did
13:14 quite a bit more flooding than it normally does.
13:16 And uh it was making me glad I was on a second story.
13:19 You're like, yes, I would like to be up off the ground.
13:21 Yes.
13:22 Yes, I would like to be on stilts right now.
13:26 [snorts]
13:25 And then um the uh another question I had.
13:28 Do you know what camera you were using?
13:30 Cuz the picture is my phone camera.
13:32 Do for all the pictures?
13:33 Oh, turned out great.
13:34 Yeah.
13:35 Okay.
13:36 What's that?
13:38 Okay, are we ready to jump back in?
13:40 Yes, we are.
13:41 Okay.
13:43 Here we go.
13:45 All right, so this is an overhead shot of Fort Gaines.
13:49 Um I don't have as much information about Fort Gaines because I don't know,
13:53 I just couldn't find as much information about it.
13:56 Um It was um
13:59 So these are on opposite sides of the same sort of inlet, right?
14:03 they are.
14:03 Very very typical kind of operation there.
14:07 Go ahead.
14:08 So this one was It was designed in 1818, so around the same time as Fort Morgan.
14:17 It actually says it that Fort Morgan is its twin fort.
14:22 But of course this one hasn't had any of the Well,
14:27 I don't know if this one had added on to it,
14:30 but I know that this one wasn't used as much Yeah.
14:33 it for um either of the World Wars
14:37 or or the Civil War because um it's on an island,
14:41 so it's harder [clears throat] to get to.
14:43 It's not as accessible for training purposes.
14:45 It's just not as useful for that.
14:48 um And so this is the inside.
14:51 Um it had kind of these identical rooms on each corner.
14:56 Um on top there was, you know, where the cannon was positioned and then there
14:59 were stairs that went down into this room here.
15:03 So this is the top and then kind of past
15:06 the cannon on the left is where the stairs would go down.
15:10 And I think the next slide is probably the stairs.
15:13 No.
15:14 Oh, this is the seawall that went along next to Fort Morgan.
15:18 And it was really long and it was great to walk down.
15:20 It was about the width of a sidewalk and it was and it
15:24 was up high enough that I wasn't worried about a snake biting my feet.
15:28 So [laughter] that made me happy.
15:30 We did see lizards though.
15:31 I didn't see any snakes.
15:33 The land of snakes.
15:35 Ah, yes.
15:35 There we go.
15:36 There's the stairs that go down into the room.
15:40 um And I Yeah.
15:45 Stairs.
15:46 So this was one of the rooms that was actually completely filled with sand.
15:51 So this So you can crawl in through the little
15:58 opening you see there and then on the left
16:01 at the far left of this picture you can see
16:03 that there's a door that's actually buried in the sand.
16:08 Um and it like this is a huge room and it was completely filled with sand.
16:13 So this was one of the outer rooms um that was close to the ocean.
16:18 So it just I don't know how it got filled with sand.
16:21 I'm assuming that there was a hurricane or something and it just Ooh.
16:24 actually filled in there.
16:26 Yeah.
16:28 And there's the rest of it.
16:29 And you can see like it is 3/4 full of sand.
16:33 Yeah.
16:34 You can stand a short person.
16:36 I could.
16:38 Lauren would be able to stand up in there.
16:39 I had to crouch a little bit in most places.
16:43 like an oven back there.
16:44 Yeah, it does.
16:45 The back there was where they put um was for storing um powder and Ah.
16:51 a magazine.
16:52 Yes, it was a magazine back there.
16:56 [snorts]
16:56 So this brings us to the second part of the livestream.
16:58 You can come back out to me.
17:00 Okay.
17:02 And we're back.
17:06 Are we?
17:07 No.
17:07 No, we are.
17:08 Oh, There we go.
17:09 Ta-da.
17:10 This is why I run the livestream.
17:11 Yeah, obviously.
17:14 [laughter] Um so this second part of our livestream is Lauren
17:17 and I we make a lot of the slides for the livestreams.
17:22 And when we're making the slides, we run across pictures that we love.
17:27 We just love them and we can't use them for the livestreams.
17:31 It's really sad.
17:32 I am always so sad.
17:34 sad.
17:34 Sometimes we will use them for the livestreams,
17:36 but often Dad doesn't talk about the things that we like about them.
17:40 So I we wanted to do some pictures and just show them and why we
17:46 love them so much and why we can't really fit them into our livestream topics.
17:52 So that's another thing that we wanted to talk
17:54 about today and you can go into the slides now.
17:57 There we go.
17:58 So I picked this one because it reminded me of Fort
18:02 Morgan and Fort Gaines because it was a castle by the sea.
18:06 Even though they're forts, but a castle fort.
18:10 Same thing.
18:10 Same thing.
18:11 Um and it this is just a beautiful picture.
18:15 This is This reminds me of Sandby, but it's by John Varley.
18:20 um And it's in Ireland or Northumberland.
18:26 I don't know which one it is.
18:28 Maybe John Varley is from Northumberland.
18:30 Could be.
18:31 Yeah, a lot of times we'll look at some
18:33 of these pictures and they the artist did such
18:36 a beautiful job that you really just want to step
18:38 through the painting and go visit what they captured.
18:42 Yes, it's beautiful and there's a little dog out there.
18:44 Mhm?
18:44 Having a fun time?
18:45 gambling about.
18:46 I can't tell what she's doing.
18:48 I think she's drawing.
18:51 I don't know.
18:53 I don't Kind of looks to like she's drawing.
18:58 Anyway, you can continue.
19:00 I'm I'm trying to fix something I broke.
19:02 Oh.
19:02 Hold on.
19:03 Uh-oh.
19:04 We'll we'll get there some of these days.
19:06 See See, look.
19:06 I figured out how to do something.
19:08 Oh, it broke it It broke it even worse.
19:10 Hold on.
19:10 [laughter] See, once again, this is why I be running See,
19:15 this is why I didn't want to run the OBS program.
19:17 just trying to have fun here and see what happens and it's
19:21 But see, I never try and have fun [laughter] when I'm running the livestream.
19:26 There.
19:26 Yeah, it's still not perfect, but Yay, we fixed it.
19:30 There.
19:30 Okay.
19:31 Oh, look at that.
19:31 Next Next, I tried to zoom in and it didn't work out.
19:36 This one I actually took a picture that was similar to this one,
19:39 although I don't think I actually made it into a slide.
19:42 um It that was in Fort Morgan.
19:46 um which is another reason why I used this one.
19:48 I So these slides are 16 by 9
19:51 and sometimes we'll just crop the picture down to 16x9.
19:55 Which we usually do if dad's doing a live stream and we
19:59 have to zoom in on something he wants to talk about anyway.
20:02 But sometimes I just can't do it because
20:05 I could have cropped this one down to 16x9.
20:08 But I I just couldn't do it because it's so I love the composition of this.
20:13 You've got the window and you can see the prisoner
20:17 and then there's just all this complete open space
20:23 and it just it you can feel that he's lonely
20:27 because of the the huge open space that he leaves.
20:30 Dad.
20:33 [laughter] Without the emptiness of the open space it does not
20:35 convey the same like it doesn't communicate the same thing.
20:38 It doesn't picture.
20:39 If I cropped this to 16x9 it just wouldn't have it
20:43 I wouldn't have felt like I was being loyal to the artist.
20:46 It's true and sometimes that happens where you're like as a live stream right
20:51 and your your your topic is about vegetables
20:54 right and the vegetables are in the far
20:55 left corner and you have to zoom in but you're like you're in love
20:58 with the whole painting and it's a feels like a crime to crop it.
21:04 [clears throat and snorts] Dad's dad dad just doesn't he doesn't get this.
21:06 Oh yes, I loved this one.
21:09 Um this one I think this is a Dr.
21:13 Syntax is what his name is.
21:15 Probably.
21:16 Oh I know actually this one.
21:18 It looks just like them.
21:19 But this is Dr.
21:21 Joseph Banks.
21:22 No, the next one is Dr.
21:24 Dr.
21:24 Joseph Banks.
21:25 This one dad's probably right about.
21:27 I didn't see this guy's name.
21:28 I'm sorry.
21:29 They look so similar.
21:30 They do look similar.
21:31 This one so in the next picture which don't go
21:35 to it yet but in the next picture he actually
21:37 has a rounded it it looks like this it looks
21:40 like the same kind of scissor net but they're rounded.
21:43 Now I've never seen a scissor net.
21:47 Not not now, right?
21:49 I know.
21:49 Why don't we have them now?
21:51 It seems like they should be.
21:53 they don't work but I don't know.
21:54 They look like they work.
21:56 Maybe they're You would think it would actually be
21:59 easier to get a butterfly out of it intact.
22:01 Yes, I would.
22:02 I would think that would be easier.
22:05 This one it really seems like it would
22:07 kill the butterfly to catch it in the net.
22:09 But you don't the net doesn't seem loose enough, yeah.
22:12 Yeah.
22:12 It's not going to hurt a butterfly.
22:14 Well, I hope not.
22:15 But I mean it would keep the wings from being damaged.
22:18 this butterfly.
22:20 Yeah, well.
22:20 He's he's going to escape.
22:21 Good job, butterfly.
22:22 But this is very classic Rowlandson in the artwork of it.
22:28 And here we go.
22:29 So this is Sir Joseph Banks and this is also by Rowlandson.
22:35 It's a little bit more finished and this one has a poem that goes with it.
22:39 So this one is Sir Joseph Banks and the Emperor of Morocco.
22:43 I don't really know what the Emperor of Morocco's about I think
22:46 it's the flower talking about I mean I think it's the butterfly sorry.
22:50 I think it's the butterfly talking.
22:53 The butterfly's talking?
22:54 Yes, the butterfly is possibly saying the poem for all we know.
22:58 Um let's see.
23:00 So the poem is Low down the lane alert
23:04 the Emperor flew and struck once more Sir Joseph's hawk-like view.
23:09 And now he mounted or garden wall.
23:12 In rushed Sir Joseph at the garden door knocked down the gardener what could
23:19 man do more and left him as he chose to rise or to sprawl.
23:24 So um that's the poem that goes with this painting
23:27 that you can't that wasn't included in the picture.
23:31 Um and Sir Joseph Banks was a English naturalist,
23:35 a botanist and a patron of the natural scientist sciences.
23:39 And he was born in 1743 and he died in 1820.
23:44 So Lauren and I were thinking that this was perhaps Rowlandson knew the
23:53 [laughter] um uh it's Sir Joseph.
23:55 [snorts] I don't think he did but it would be funny if he did.
23:58 It would be really me it would be so funny
23:59 if this was a depiction of a real life event.
24:02 Now what I thought was interesting was I didn't hadn't actually noticed the poor
24:05 gardener who's been trampled until the poem came up and and I was reading it.
24:09 take me a second to realize the gardener because you're so focused on the net
24:14 and he's like focused on the action shot of the butterfly trying to get away.
24:19 And I don't think this is just knocking down the gardener.
24:22 This is flat you know walking over the poor gardener just to get his butterfly.
24:28 a single-minded focus this butterfly hunter.
24:31 In the Aubrey Maturin series um Maturin
24:35 talks about a lot about Sir Joseph Banks.
24:38 You'll hear his name popping up over and over again.
24:40 Yes.
24:46 Um this one is by Sandby.
24:48 I put a lot by Sandby in here because I just I I love his art.
24:53 It is so beautiful.
24:54 It is so it's very identifiable as well.
25:00 Yes.
25:01 Just like Rowlandson in a very different way.
25:03 His feels very water colory.
25:07 It feels very light and airy and springy.
25:10 It feels like very appropriate to this season.
25:13 He water colors like Lauren water colors uh without putting a lot of shading in.
25:20 Yeah, it's saturation can be a little lighter sometimes.
25:23 His saturation is light but it still just creates beautiful imagery.
25:27 And um but most of his paintings that I put
25:30 in here were just to share because they're just they're just so
25:34 beautiful and you just want to walk into the painting and visit
25:38 this place and it seems like a really nice day there.
25:42 Um this is by Sandby.
25:44 I thought this one was beautiful.
25:45 This one's a little darker than his other ones
25:47 but also for being night time it's still rather desaturated.
25:56 And um you can see the castle up on the hill and the stream
26:01 going by and then the um the people listening and singing music.
26:07 It's just it's It is the like time full moon
26:11 time to go out and and do some outside activities.
26:14 I think this tree shows up in about half the 18th century paintings I've Well,
26:19 I'm always very interested to see how often people reference the full moon.
26:24 Like to to us it doesn't really make
26:26 any difference whether the moon's full or not, right?
26:29 But if the moon is full you can sometimes go out
26:32 at night and and do quite like you can you can navigate around.
26:36 You could you know you can tell that they
26:38 can drive coaches at night in a full moon.
26:40 play music.
26:41 But you can play music.
26:42 It's the perfect time and that they would plan around it
26:44 and that's not something we You you could do more things.
26:48 Yes.
26:51 This one was also beautiful.
26:53 This one just reminded me of children's books.
26:58 Um I don't know.
26:59 It just it it was such a it was such a evocative picture making
27:06 you think of it just make you see what being a child is like.
27:12 Yeah.
27:13 It it's it's more common in the 19th century and as you get later
27:17 and later to kind of have this very kind of idealized view of childhood.
27:22 Yeah.
27:22 And you can it feels in the 18th century it feels much more uh practical.
27:27 You're like they're waiting for you to get old enough to put to work.
27:30 But um and here we are probably right early 19th century and you're starting
27:34 to get a you know kind of a bit more gentleness in the depiction.
27:38 Mhm.
27:38 And I love the stream.
27:39 Like to me this does remind you of being
27:41 a kid and Especially at night and remembering coming
27:45 home and the light is at the house is
27:48 all lit up but everything else is dark and Yeah,
27:52 but the author or the artist is totally
27:57 This this light coming in this magic light coming
28:00 in from the side and having to go
28:02 through these trees blah blah blah is totally fake.
28:06 This is why I'm doing this live stream.
28:08 Right?
28:09 This is why we're doing the art live stream.
28:11 It's just terrible.
28:13 This what kind of artist is this?
28:17 This one I put in solely for the person's face second to the left.
28:24 I love his face in this especially because it the artist
28:28 just captures the look perfectly for um for very few lines.
28:36 Well, notice this is Pine who we just focused on a couple of weeks ago.
28:41 But this is one of his sketches where
28:43 we're just seeing the rough And I love sketches.
28:46 I love to see what artists can do with just a sketch.
28:50 Um and just how much emotion they can put in with just a sketch.
28:54 And this is an illustration to Rob Roy.
28:57 I don't I was going to look up where in Rob
29:00 Roy it was talking about but I ran out of time.
29:02 Well, it's a drinking party.
29:06 [snorts]
29:06 Wow.
29:06 Yes.
29:06 [laughter] Yes.
29:07 There's a little bit of smoking in there, too.
29:09 Sure.
29:10 Sure.
29:11 Um That's what it said.
29:12 This is them capturing a swarm of bees.
29:16 Which I'm not sure why they're capturing this swarm of bees.
29:21 Because you want the honey.
29:23 Right?
29:24 It's like it's like a a spare, you know,
29:27 swarm that maybe you didn't have before and or it could
29:30 be that one of your swarms that was in a hive
29:33 split off and they swarmed and left and you're trying
29:35 to grab them and put them in a new hive.
29:37 Maybe.
29:38 But I I love beekeeping like the concept of it
29:41 and you don't you definitely see references to it and you
29:45 know they were doing it but you don't see a lot
29:46 of you know kind of in-depth depictions of it very often.
29:49 So I'm always excited to see them.
29:51 A few years ago we covered a book on beekeeping in one of the live streams.
29:55 [clears throat] I think this I think Lauren
29:57 probably saved this one from that live stream.
30:00 Yes.
30:00 I think this is probably the one one of the ones
30:02 where we have put it in the live stream,
30:05 but it just it's it's more fun and needs to be saved in other ways.
30:10 I think that the people are banging on pots
30:14 and pans to make the bees do certain things.
30:18 So there's people in the background.
30:19 Yes.
30:19 Do you think they're trying to chase the bees away from you?
30:23 Keep them from settling down in a particular area so
30:26 they can move them when they want them to be.
30:27 I can't remember.
30:29 If someone has bees they'll have to let us know.
30:32 Yeah.
30:32 If they tried to cook cuz cuz cuz bees are very um one
30:37 of the rare insects that we use as a as a companion animal.
30:42 Right.
30:43 I mean cuz you know mostly they're just in general.
30:45 [laughter] Bees are very friendly.
30:48 are for a person.
30:49 They absolutely are bug.
30:52 insect Next.
30:54 This one is just it it was just much too late for us to use in any live streams.
30:58 This was 7 1879 and it's much too late,
31:02 but it's just it's just a beautiful artwork and I
31:09 love that he's holding the letter in his mouth.
31:11 Oh he's digging through his bag.
31:13 I'm I'm I'm assuming that he's holding a letter in his mouth that goes
31:18 to this house and then he's looking to see if there's anything else.
31:22 I wonder why the glasses that are part
31:24 of the sign have a different color lens in each side.
31:28 I know.
31:28 It looks like it looks like uh 3D glasses Right.
31:32 Do you think maybe it was for like eye correction?
31:36 I don't know.
31:38 I think when we were doing the eye glass live stream it was talking
31:42 a bit about using like different color
31:45 lenses for different when you had different diseases.
31:47 True.
31:48 I just never seen them with different so colors in them one on each side.
31:54 This one Lauren and I were talking about when I was
31:57 making this slide and we were thinking this peddler she he saw
32:02 this woman coming from a mile away and he ran right
32:06 up to her with all his ribbons because obviously she loves ribbons.
32:11 She's got a ribbon around her hat.
32:13 She specifically put ribbons on her short gown to tie
32:18 it together and she's obviously someone who's interested in ribbons.
32:24 I'm familiar with the artist, but I have not seen this image before.
32:29 Obviously Lauren hasn't shown this one to me.
32:32 Right.
32:32 Right.
32:32 I kept this one a secret.
32:33 I didn't know if I could lure Dad in with ribbons.
32:36 I wasn't sure if it was a strong enough topic.
32:38 [clears throat] So there's a jaw harp
32:40 on the table and some wooden carved spoons etc.
32:46 And are they ribbons or are they woven bands?
32:53 Probably ribbons.
32:54 Do you think the one in her hair is a woven band?
32:57 Cuz it's very intricate.
32:59 The one she's got in her hair.
33:05 But I I am very fond of this one.
33:07 I love the colors.
33:09 Yes.
33:09 I think he's got such a pleasant face.
33:11 Yes.
33:12 Sure.
33:13 You you were comparing him to He's probably going
33:15 to hurry up and pick the one you want, okay?
33:18 And he doesn't have a hat on.
33:20 Well, his hat is down here with ribbons on it.
33:23 He wore it in Oh oh I see it down there.
33:25 He's right.
33:25 Yeah.
33:28 Maybe they're inside.
33:30 This one Dad would never ever do.
33:33 um because he doesn't The plants do not seem to interest Dad.
33:39 Shocking.
33:39 Dad doesn't like vegetables.
33:41 He doesn't like flowers.
33:44 I have our own live streams just to talk about the plants.
33:47 I am impressed with the artist on this one.
33:50 Just that's hard to draw to do a dandelion and he he captured
33:56 the curve of the dandelion puff and then he was just showing off.
34:00 This artist was just showing off in this painting.
34:03 I'm um And I do like somebody a little
34:07 earlier was talking about photography and how how odd
34:11 it was that back in the time before cameras
34:14 some of the the pictures look like they're photographs.
34:17 They're that accurate,
34:18 that detailed and that now that we have photographs that it's
34:21 actually the you know that often they're much less photorealistic than pictures.
34:27 And this one is definitely a candidate for looking almost like a photograph.
34:33 It's so good.
34:34 And most of the herbals and images that you
34:37 see of plants aren't aren't really executed very well.
34:41 No.
34:41 No, that's true.
34:42 They're much more like I'm sure they have to do
34:44 a lot of quantity and they kind of have to make them the ones I've seen up being
34:48 a lot more like line drawings and that sort of thing.
34:50 This is a very high level dandelion reproduction.
34:54 [laughter] Yeah.
34:55 Obviously they're doing it.
34:56 Well, and it's a it's a female.
34:58 It's Barbara.
34:59 Oh that's true.
34:59 Which is it is more unusual to see female artists.
35:03 Very much so in the time period.
35:07 This one I loved for Oh I should have looked up the term.
35:11 Didn't we look up this term Oh yeah.
35:13 Hold on.
35:14 Hold on.
35:15 I got it.
35:15 The nighttime kind of shot.
35:16 It's a term about the very stark change from light to dark.
35:23 And there's a specific artist that's known for it.
35:26 Rembrandt?
35:27 Rembrandt.
35:27 Yes.
35:28 I thought it was Rembrandt, but I didn't want to be wrong.
35:30 um Rembrandt is um known for it and it was
35:36 I feel like it was more used earlier in paintings.
35:42 um But it's it's still used,
35:44 but it's um just a very stark contrast of light and dark.
35:50 I think it's cuz I never remember how to say it.
35:54 Yes.
35:57 Yeah.
35:57 I say that all the time.
35:58 Sounds Italian perhaps.
36:00 Yeah.
36:00 Like most of the painters.
36:02 Yes.
36:02 Yes.
36:05 And I like his shadow on the wall behind him.
36:09 I don't know why there are so many
36:10 people in this blacksmith shop so late at night.
36:14 It's this particular artist does it over and over again.
36:17 He sometimes have little kids standing around or whatever.
36:20 And of course, you know,
36:21 if the metal was hot enough to to light up the scene that much when they hit
36:26 it with a hammer sparks would fly everywhere
36:28 and nobody would want to be close to it.
36:30 Dad's saying this is a very unsafe, not OSHA approved workplace.
36:33 [laughter] Yeah.
36:34 It's not OSHA not approved here.
36:38 So speaking of female artists, this is a drawing that Sandby did and people
36:50 are pretty sure that this is one of his pupils.
36:55 um Cuz you can see her drawing at this desk
36:57 and he has done at least two paintings of her.
37:01 um In the same at the same desk wearing similar clothing at the same window.
37:07 Well, sometimes when you got a model you just make the most of it.
37:10 You're like someone who doesn't mind sitting still.
37:11 I assume while she was drawing something he
37:15 was drawing her because he That's always a good
37:18 time to draw someone when they're busy with something
37:21 as that takes as little movement as drawing.
37:24 It's perfect.
37:27 This is a teapot with a pineapple on it.
37:30 And this is because uh my family really enjoys watching Psych and if
37:37 you get it you get it and if you don't then you don't.
37:39 Then you don't.
37:41 And okay, I was also interested by the chain on the teapot.
37:47 And why don't want to lose the lid?
37:49 I think it's so that you don't lose the lid.
37:51 That does make sense cuz sometimes that happens tab to catch it on the inside.
37:58 Yeah.
37:58 I also think the chain is very decorative.
38:01 Let's jump out for a second so that Lauren can read to some
38:04 things before we end and get to the end of the transcript.
38:11 I got to get to my little screen.
38:13 Okay.
38:14 Okay.
38:14 So Super chat from the beginning of the thing from Mandatory Carrie.
38:20 Thank you.
38:21 Thank you.
38:22 And then this is from Rob Dixon.
38:24 Hey Lauren, thanks so much for letting me shop yesterday.
38:27 You were so knowledgeable about all the items.
38:29 Thanks for your help.
38:30 Rob came in the other day.
38:31 He was traveling through, made an appointment, dropped into the store.
38:34 Great to talk to him.
38:35 So thanks.
38:36 Thank you.
38:36 Yes.
38:36 Thank you.
38:37 You're faster at this finding these people to pop up than I am.
38:40 I don't even know who that [laughter] one is.
38:41 I have my own I have a special screen for it.
38:44 And then here's one from the Wheat's Experience.
38:46 Just a super chat.
38:47 So thank you.
38:49 And then this one is from Judge Fudge.
38:51 Just came back from a motorcycle ride
38:53 and stopped by a historic graveyard in my town.
38:56 It was created in 1855.
38:59 Some people who rest there were born
39:01 in the 1760s which predated American Independence.
39:04 History is the best.
39:06 That is I love visiting old graveyards and finding
39:10 the oldest stones there and seeing the different decorations
39:13 that they have on them and if you can
39:15 read it and sometimes they have little poems on them.
39:18 I just think it's fun.
39:20 I don't really care about the newer sections.
39:22 They all have the fake flowers.
39:23 I don't boring Yeah.
39:25 I I love love going to the ones in Maine cuz they use slate.
39:30 And it just has this particular look to the stones and they just
39:33 a live stream on I think we have.
39:35 We did.
39:35 [laughter] We did do a live stream on gravestones.
39:38 [clears throat] And I mean they're just such cuz like they're you know,
39:41 the different the individual people have their own monuments.
39:44 So, it's it's beautiful.
39:47 Okay, so this one's from Speed and Style Tony
39:49 some funds to find more beautiful pictures for us.
39:52 Thank you.
39:53 We will do that.
39:54 We will keep finding beautiful pictures.
39:56 Although whether Dad will talk about them or not I I can't guarantee that.
39:59 That's okay.
40:00 Ivy can host the beautiful picture live stream
40:02 [laughter] every once in a while to catch up.
40:05 Okay, so Um I did have Sandy who'd
40:10 asked earlier and you can answer Dad this question.
40:14 They were wondering if they celebrated Easter in the 18th century.
40:18 Easter, yes.
40:22 Kind of as a very high holiday in in the church especially like it you know
40:27 a lot of uh a lot of special things they would do that time of year.
40:35 Okay, do you did you have anything you wanted to catch up on Dad?
40:40 On your side?
40:40 Okay, good.
40:41 Okay, and then this here's another super chat.
40:43 This one is from Maxar cool really enjoying the art selections today.
40:48 Thank you.
40:49 Do you like them?
40:50 Part of the Okay, most of it was Lauren really.
40:52 Okay.
40:53 Part of it was me.
40:54 I did a lot of the Sandby ones.
40:56 Lauren did a lot of the Lauren found a lot of the other
40:58 ones and then I selected them out of the ones Lauren found.
41:01 So Right, but I mean at least Ivy understands why I save the pretty pictures.
41:07 Dad looks at them sometimes he's like what is a picture?
41:12 [laughter] He's like where's the hats?
41:14 Uh this question uh can you do a live stream
41:16 or video talking about artists in the 18th century in North America?
41:20 Uh there just aren't very many.
41:23 Um there's really only only one and he was doing
41:27 his art in Great Britain even though he's from North America.
41:29 So It's a would be a very short live stream.
41:33 I do we did do a live stream some time ago that was
41:38 about drawing and artists and I'm trying to remember the name of it.
41:41 It was one of the really early ones I did.
41:43 I'll I'll I'll link it if I can remember which one it was.
41:47 Okay, any other pictures that we need to get to?
41:49 Yeah.
41:50 Yeah, we are.
41:50 I still have some hold on.
41:52 I'm getting there.
41:53 got like 40 slides for today.
41:55 I was all prepared.
41:57 Okay, there's a teapot.
41:59 Okay, this is another Sandby.
42:03 Uh this one I was I like the water in this one.
42:07 Um I'm always impressed when people do water.
42:10 I can't do water this well.
42:11 Water's hard.
42:13 Um although he did it well.
42:19 Um I mean you you know, you're like that's flowing water.
42:22 I'm not confused at all.
42:23 It looks great.
42:24 Not at all.
42:25 And I love the bridge.
42:26 Yes, I love the bridge.
42:28 I don't know who's walking over the bridge.
42:31 I think it's a guy riding on top of a dog.
42:35 I was thinking it looked like it either looked like a guy walking a giant dog.
42:40 I'm assuming he's I would guess that he's riding a horse or a donkey.
42:46 See here's what I'm impressed by is looking at that I'm
42:50 guessing that this is actually a fairly small piece of art.
42:54 Hmm, yeah.
42:55 Um and to get the water to work in a small
42:59 piece of art is I mean it's I'm not an artist, okay.
43:03 But I think it looks easier to do when you
43:06 got 6 ft of canvas to work with, you know, and you can nuance it.
43:10 Yes.
43:10 But if you're doing something little and you're trying to make water work,
43:13 it's probably a lot more difficult.
43:15 Yeah.
43:17 I shouldn't look up how big paintings are next time I
43:21 Cuz every once in a while just like like the Mona Lisa
43:24 or a lot of the Van Goghs we saw they were much
43:27 smaller than a lot of the reproductions of them that I had seen.
43:30 So it was very interesting to see.
43:32 if you ever see Brueghels or not Brueghels but um what's his name?
43:40 Uh yeah, Brueghels.
43:41 They're much smaller.
43:43 Really?
43:43 Oh yeah.
43:44 Well, he's packing it in, eh?
43:45 Oh, I mean you just you really have to And like
43:50 that being able to do that level of detail on that scale,
43:53 you know, as so much packed into the area
43:55 that is that does make it more impressive.
43:58 Right.
43:58 And we've done a live stream on miniatures.
44:01 Yes.
44:01 And what have we not done a live stream on?
44:04 Okay, here we go.
44:06 I was impressed by the textures in this one especially his shirt.
44:11 Um wrinkles are hard.
44:13 So is hair.
44:15 Um both the wrinkles on his clothing
44:17 and on his skin and his hands are very impressive, too.
44:21 Um my our grandmother is an artist and she
44:26 um gave me art lessons and Lauren and Sydney
44:29 art lessons separately and she would have us
44:32 do study specifically on hands because hands are hard.
44:36 Um your brain wants to draw hands in a certain
44:41 way um and that's not what hands actually look like.
44:45 Your brain wants to draw things a lot of things in a certain way.
44:49 and all that good stuff when you can't see them.
44:52 You Yes.
44:53 Well, and you know, you're talking about their ability to do this, you know,
44:57 fine level of detail like with the the shirt and that and for us
45:02 trying to recreate things from the 18th century, you know,
45:05 often working with text descriptions and then it's so wonderful to have
45:09 these artists who care so much and are doing such a high level
45:13 job of capturing what they're seeing so that we can do our best
45:16 to recreate it and kind of have the aid of, you know,
45:20 looking back at the visual cuz the written descriptions are wonderful but they
45:24 are missing key hints and so you can find those in the pictures.
45:28 Yeah.
45:29 Go ahead.
45:30 One more thing about this painting is that this man
45:34 he just seems like someone you would meet today.
45:36 Like I can I can just imagine this kind of person.
45:40 Um you know, just uh as a normal person that you would meet today.
45:45 He's one of the shopkeepers here in Pierstown.
45:47 This is his this is his retirement job.
45:49 And he would chat to you for like 15 minutes while you would
45:52 just wanted to check out but you would still enjoy [laughter] the conversation.
45:57 would.
45:56 Um Uh yeah, look at the seam in that in on the shoulder of the shirt,
46:05 uh the band collar and the the detail that we have of that just just amazing.
46:12 So we So Kingdom Minded Warrior was wondering if there was
46:15 a reason that there was such a long tube on the pipe.
46:18 Does it smoke better that way?
46:20 Yeah, it's a cooler smoke.
46:22 I thought I thought this pipe just looked funny in general but Well,
46:26 he's holding it sideways.
46:28 We actually did have some really long
46:30 churchwardens like this for a while and they
46:32 like people loved them but they were just they broke too much in shipping.
46:35 It was so sad.
46:36 up on them.
46:37 I I did like I I am really sorry about that.
46:40 It's one of one of the things that that we
46:43 discontinued just cuz of that sort of complication.
46:49 Another Sandby.
46:50 I think we did this one in the Did we do a picnic one?
46:55 I feel like we did do a picnic one.
46:56 We did do a picnic live stream and I think that this is from that one.
47:00 Um Who can remember?
47:03 This just looks like I would have a picnic here.
47:07 It's beautiful.
47:08 It kind of reminds me of um Box Hill.
47:11 Yes, and how it's described in Emma.
47:14 And um it's just it's and how far you
47:21 can see from up there and obviously it's a popular
47:24 picnic spot because there's at least two people or two
47:27 groups of people that are up here having a picnic.
47:31 And maybe they're from that um that manor house that's down that's down there.
47:37 They don't look quite well to me.
47:40 Not really.
47:42 Oh, here's a little cat and I I loved about this cat
47:48 that the mouse is literally right behind it and it it doesn't care.
47:53 It's in the sun.
47:54 It's having a nice time.
47:55 It does not care about the mouse.
47:57 It's not working right now.
47:58 It's on its lunch break.
48:00 It's like every other cat I know.
48:01 He's he's ignoring his only job.
48:04 Yes.
48:04 [laughter] And I love the texture, the fur,
48:07 the way that its eyes are closed like cats' eyes
48:11 close when they're happy and it's just a piece just Well,
48:15 in this case we have and we don't talk about
48:17 this much though that you've got two layers of artists here.
48:20 This is a This is an engraving or a you
48:23 know whatever technique they used for this particular thing.
48:27 So there's the original artist who did it in probably some [snorts] other Right.
48:32 medium and then the artist who has
48:34 to transfer this into the way it's printed here.
48:38 See Dad does have things to say about these.
48:42 Uh-huh.
48:41 But he just wouldn't say them.
48:44 [laughter] Next.
48:45 say look that's a cat.
48:48 We've done this one before.
48:49 We have.
48:50 This one is a washing day and I think it's
48:53 fun that this is uh This isn't Paul Sandby's house.
48:59 This is the garden of Thomas Sandby's house.
49:01 I wonder if they're related.
49:03 I think they are.
49:04 Yes, so I think it's his brother's house.
49:06 [laughter] Well, they might not be.
49:11 It's possible.
49:12 But no, I think it was his brother.
49:14 What are the chances?
49:16 [laughter]
49:17 Um And what's the little um the little building in the back right corner, Dad?
49:22 Do you know?
49:23 It's the house or it might be an outdoor kitchen where they do the laundry.
49:29 It looks too small to be the house.
49:31 Well, then it's probably an outdoor building
49:33 that they do things It's washing in.
49:36 And I love the willow behind them.
49:39 And that there's the different textures in the trees.
49:42 And And a kid chasing a goose, which every Right through the laundry.
49:50 Yep.
49:49 And I I always it it is not uncommon
49:55 for you to be looking for something to be depicted, right?
50:00 And for you to struggle to find artistic depictions of it.
50:04 And laundry can be one of those things where you know that people were doing it
50:07 day in day or week in and week out cuz there was probably a laundry day.
50:11 And then but that you don't find it in depicted in art
50:16 as much as you would proportionately as you would hope to see.
50:20 So, I I'm always excited to see some of those things in a in a picture.
50:23 Too true.
50:24 And there's dogs in this picture.
50:27 I don't know what kind of dogs, but they're dogs.
50:31 Sporting dogs, I do believe.
50:35 I think this is the last one and then we'll go back to you.
50:38 That's it.
50:38 And I did I thought I put more pictures in.
50:42 I took a photo more than but obviously I didn't.
50:45 Um um cuz I think there was the one that I was going to try and put
50:48 in that was like the prisoner um painting that I put in there but it's fine.
50:55 I didn't put it in.
50:55 You can imagine it.
50:57 Yes.
50:57 It was I got to see it.
50:58 It was a great picture.
50:59 Yes.
50:59 I only took a half day today because it was Good Friday today so
51:04 um I came in late and I rushed to get the live stream and I got dressed like
51:10 15 minutes before the live stream and We got
51:14 We all rolled in in time to get it started.
51:16 of times that Dad only is in his period
51:20 clothes about 15 minutes before the live stream, 5 minutes.
51:24 10 minutes.
51:25 Is that every time?
51:26 Yes.
51:26 It is It is every time.
51:27 It's I wear 18th century clothes all the time.
51:31 24/7.
51:32 24/7.
51:33 That makes any outfit he wears [laughter] period.
51:36 Yes.
51:36 By hand and he wears it all the time.
51:39 Don't let anyone tell you otherwise.
51:43 Okay.
51:43 I think that that's it unless Lauren, do you have anything else?
51:47 I More super chats or questions?
51:50 Oh oh.
51:51 Uh Rose was saying, "How about a show
51:53 about 18th century artists?" Which would be fun, right?
51:56 be fun.
51:57 Yeah.
51:58 That would be she said women artists.
52:00 Oh, I'm sorry.
52:01 Yes.
52:02 18th century women artists.
52:03 Did I not include that part?
52:04 There are some famous ones.
52:06 Mhm.
52:06 Yeah.
52:07 [clears throat] Yep.
52:07 Yep.
52:09 Okay.
52:09 Yes.
52:10 I think we are all caught up.
52:11 All right.
52:12 Well, I guess thank you all for coming into the tavern today.
52:16 Thank you for um coming even though I'm sure I'm a worse presenter than Dad is.
52:22 And Practice.
52:24 Practice practice makes perfect.
52:26 That's what I'm doing right now.
52:27 I'm practicing.
52:28 Um and I hope you guys all have a great
52:31 Easter weekend and thank you guys so much for watching.
52:34 We'll see you later.
52:35 Yep.
52:36 Bye.