Episode 2 The Repair Shop


Episode 2

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Welcome to The Repair Shop,

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where cherished family heirlooms are brought back to life.

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Anything can happen - this is the workshop of dreams.

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Home to furniture restorer, Jay Blades.

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Nowadays, things are not built to last,

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so we've become part of this throwaway culture.

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It's all about preserving and restoring.

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We bring the old back to new.

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Working alongside Jay

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will be some of the country's leading craftspeople.

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I like making things with my hands.

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I love to see how things work and I want to know how things work.

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Whether it is a Rembrandt or somebody's family piece,

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every painting deserves the same.

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Each bringing their own unique set of skills.

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You're about to witness some magic.

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They will resurrect...

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-..revive...

-Oh, yes.

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..and rejuvenate...

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..treasured possessions and irreplaceable pieces

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of family history.

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-Oh, my goodness.

-Goodness, me.

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Bringing both the objects...

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Oh, wow.

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..and the memories that they hold...

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-Oh, thank you.

-..back to life.

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Thank you so much.

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I want to kiss you.

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In the Repair Shop today, timepiece tinkering is on hold,

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as clock restoration expert Steve

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is called up to work on a vintage telephone.

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It is at this point that I worry that springs are going to

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shoot out all over the place.

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While specialist Richard Rigby restores a collector's item

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that casts its spell over everyone in the Repair Shop.

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Wow.

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So what are we waiting for today?

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We've got a customer coming.

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-Something for me?

-You're keen, aren't you?

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Well, yeah, it is something for you then.

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First, furniture dream team Jay and Will are standing by to meet

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Helen Smith from Herefordshire.

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-Hello.

-Hello.

-How are we doing?

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-I'm fine, thanks.

-So here it is, yeah?

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-It is here.

-OK.

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All right. We'll get this out.

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-Lovely.

-I will lead the way.

-You lead the way.

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So what is it?

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-It's a piano stool for two people.

-A piano stool for two people.

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Is it all right to lift it up and have a look?

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Ooh.

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So what's the history behind this one, then?

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This belonged to my grandmother.

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I was actually born in the room that this lived.

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So I've known this all my life.

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On my grandmother's death, she left it to my sister,

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and my sister had a big puppy

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and the puppy would go into his chewing phase...

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-Wow.

-Was that in one sitting or...?

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No, I should imagine, cos the piano's also had a little nibble,

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but not as bad as that.

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He had a nibble of the piano!

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He couldn't play the tune, so he thought he would have a nibble.

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And then I see that it's got, like, this tapestry on top.

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Yeah. Gran did that.

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Gran did that. I see it brought a smile to your face.

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Yeah. Yeah.

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That's in amazing condition.

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-It is, actually.

-I mean, considering when you look at everything else...

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Yes, it was lucky to get away with it, I think.

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Perhaps it didn't taste as good as the wood.

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Helen's grandmother Enid Ruth Wicks honed her musical skills

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on this piano.

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My grandmother was a very keen pianist.

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She was very good although she would say that she was competent.

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She was a member of the Royal Academy of Music,

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played in concerts for the BBC.

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I think when you inherit or you have an heirloom in your family,

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there's a responsibility to look after it the best that you can,

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and at the moment I'm not fulfilling my responsibility.

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So, Will, what you reckon? Do you know anything about the age of this?

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-Have you seen stuff like this before?

-It looks sort of like

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typical art and crafts furniture - 1890s, 1910.

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Really nice piece. With the base, I'd like to use this.

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Oh, yeah. That would be brill.

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I say that now, but once I'm working....

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What am I doing?

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I'm honoured to be working on something like this.

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So as soon as we've got it repaired and looking fabulous again...

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-Yes.

-..we will get back to you.

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Lovely, thank you very much.

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All right, thank you.

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-Lovely, thanks very much. Goodbye.

-Bye.

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That's amazing. I know dogs go through a chewing phase but that is...

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At least he left us something.

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He left us a clue, yeah.

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Because we learned to play the piano with my grandmother,

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it's a family piece so, yeah,

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I'm really excited about seeing what they're going to do.

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What are you going to do with the fabric and with the top?

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Basically it has to fit perfectly because, as you can see here,

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the corner's coming out because this is too tight.

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It won't fit in there perfectly.

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-Why's that too tight?

-I think what might have happened...

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..is they've just covered over an original fabric on top of it,

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but I won't be able to tell until I've taken it off.

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I'm working out who has the most amount of work for this job.

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Definitely me, obviously.

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-It always seems to be me.

-It's always me.

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And then you walk over and say, "Is that ready yet?"

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-Five minutes.

-Of course.

-Make a cup of tea.

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Well, you've got to make the tea and get on with it,

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cos I'm off, mate. You've got to lift it over by yourself.

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-I've got the heavy bit.

-I like a challenge, James.

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So I have glued up the top of the chair, clamped it all into place,

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snug as a bug in a rug.

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The beading on the back is near enough all intact.

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Whereas round the front and the sides they're flaking off,

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so I've made the executive decision to keep that.

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I thought would be quite nice to keep some of the original.

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From wood to brass, ceramics or stuffing...

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Out it comes.

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..whatever the material,

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the Repair Shop team use their years of experience

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to lovingly restore it.

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The next customer dialling 999 for an antiques emergency is Helen Kent.

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-Hello.

-Hello, how are we doing?

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I am fine, thank you. How are you?

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I'm very good. What have we got here, then?

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It's an old daffodil telephone.

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A daffodil telephone?

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-Yes.

-OK, the person you need to see then is Steve.

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Steve, got one for you.

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-Thank you very much.

-Have a look at this. No problem.

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Steve may be the Repair Shop's clockmaker...

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Right, let's have a look at this telephone.

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..but he's also the go-to guy for most of the mechanical curios

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that arrive through its doors.

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Tell me a bit about its history.

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Well, I don't know where it started its life,

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but it came to me when I was very early married.

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And so I've had it since the very early '60s.

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Also known as a candlestick or stick phone,

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this model dates from the mid-1920s.

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You think about all the calls it's made in its life.

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-Absolutely.

-That's incredible.

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Yes, I mean it functioned when I was first married

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-and I was a community midwife.

-Oh, really?

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Not very convenient because of course you've got to hold

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the daffodil and the earpiece, not like today.

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Oh, yes, of course. I hadn't thought about that.

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Unless you do it like this.

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So you picked the phone up and put that thing to your ear.

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So what's wrong with it?

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The dial doesn't go round any more.

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You can make it go round but I...

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It only... It doesn't really go around at all.

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It's as if it has all seized up.

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But I love the challenge of doing something like this.

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Leave it with me and I'll see how I get on.

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-OK.

-OK, thank you for bringing it in.

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-Fantastic. Thank you very much.

-Bye-bye now.

-Bye.

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If Steve can make it work, so much the better,

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but so long as it just looks nicer and the fact that my grandchildren

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would be able to play with it and get, sort of, pleasure from it,

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that my children had from it, that would be wonderful.

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It's at this point that I worry that springs are going to shoot out

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all over the place as soon as I start taking it apart.

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I've never seen inside a telephone before, and the dialling unit

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is absolutely alien to me.

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The dial has gone back to a point which it shouldn't because it looks

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as if it has been forced the wrong way,

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and that might have caused some damage.

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So I am hoping that it might be a simple fix.

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But hold the line, Steve.

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Woodwork whiz-kid Will wants a second opinion on salvaging

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the damaged piece of wood from the piano stool.

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So I was thinking something more like that.

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So that's the old piece there, that's the new piece.

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-What do you think?

-Why are you doing this?

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I thought it would be nice to keep some of the original.

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-OK.

-And once I've set that into there,

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or spliced it on I will replicate the same pattern along the rest

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-of the beam.

-It's going to be a weakness.

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Yeah.

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That's why I was going to dowel to give it a bit more strength.

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How about cutting it down the centre...

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..and setting half of it into the new bars?

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So you still keep the strength integrity of the new piece.

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I see. So I'd have to leave enough on the inside as a core for the strength.

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Yeah, yeah.

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And then draw these out?

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-Yeah.

-That is a good idea.

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That's why I asked you over, Steve.

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He's the brains of the family, innit.

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He's got years on me, hasn't he?

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-So...

-There we go.

-Oh, steady on...

-Years of knowledge.

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That's better. See, you've got to follow it through.

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Meanwhile, Jay is more concerned with avoiding a saggy bottom.

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I'm putting in webbing...

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..into the bottom of the frame...

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..which is basically the foundation.

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It's what's going to allow someone to sit on top,

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rather than falling straight through.

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When you get it at the right note then you know that is when you need

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to staple it.

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Because that is no sound.

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No stability - it goes straight through.

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So...

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It's that, that's nice.

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It sounds like a bass, double bass.

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-That one.

-I think we should turn it into like a family band, Jay.

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A family band.

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And I could be on the drill.

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That does sound nice.

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You up for some of that, Kirsten?

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Maybe lead vocals?

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And I know Steve has got something, he's got something to do with this.

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Yeah, Steve is on the cup.

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We're going on tour next week.

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Lovely. Great.

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Smashing. Super.

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Musical ability aside,

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when it comes to transforming the unloved and unusable

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back to the glorious objects they once were,

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this talented team share a wealth of skills and know-how.

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And next in line for the Repair Shop treatment,

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Judith Barrett and her son Ben from Oxfordshire.

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How are we doing? You all right?

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That's a big box, innit?

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Yes. Heavy box.

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Right.

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I like this already.

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-What is it, anyway?

-Well, inside there's a magic lantern.

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There's a magic lantern?

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Oh, wow. Oh, cor blimey, this is heavy, isn't it?

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Magic lanterns were wildly popular in wealthy households of the Victorian era,

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projecting pictures onto walls to enthral and entertain.

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-That's the bit that needs fixing.

-That is the bit.

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Richard Rigby is an expert in these fascinating items

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and if anyone can restore it, he can.

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Oh, wow.

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This is a nice, exciting project.

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You've got a lovely machine there.

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-Good.

-You couldn't have brought a better one.

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-Oh, excellent.

-So do tell me about this.

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How's it been in your family?

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How long has it been there? And just the history behind it.

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Long before I was married, I got very interested in bits of antiques,

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much to my parents' dismay.

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And I bought this and I just took it home and then I married,

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had a family and started to show them...

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-He was...

-Small.

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Very small. And when they get married and they have children,

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they have been rather on at me to get the show out

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for the little ones, the younger ones.

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What I thought was that when we were kids and we watched it, we loved it.

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So it would be really fun to try and get it working again,

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-and give them a show with it.

-So if you leave the lantern with us,

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Richard is going to work his magic on the magic lantern,

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and we will get back to you once it's fully restored.

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Thank you, Richard. Looking forward to that.

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-I'll do my best.

-Thank you. Bye-bye.

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-Cheers.

-Take care.

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The family will be pleased because I have been being nagged

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by the older children to let their children see it.

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But I have been so worried about it being a bit rusty and very delicate,

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but I think now we will be able to, and they will all be able to have it and it will be good fun.

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So, Richard, we best get this on your bench and hopefully get it fully restored,

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so the children can actually enjoy something that is 100 years old

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and something that their parents enjoyed as well.

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That's right, and their grandparents.

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-Are you ready for this?

-I am.

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-I'll carry the heavy bit.

-OK.

-That's me.

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Thanks a lot.

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I love to improve things.

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Simple as that.

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And I hate waste.

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I hate old wonderful old machines being destroyed or skipped.

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It is just wrong.

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But to renovate this complex machine fast,

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Richard is going to need the help of everyone in the Repair Shop.

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First in focus, mechanical mastermind Steve.

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This is right up your street and not up mine.

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-Go on.

-This is what we call a flasher.

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Thank you very much.

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THEY CHUCKLE

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At some stage, this has been replaced by a piece of tin can.

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-You can still see the curve to it.

-OK.

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What I'd like to do is take that off and make a new circular piece.

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In brass.

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-I can do that.

-Yeah?

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-All right, leave that with me.

-Take care.

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While Richard starts work on the magic lantern,

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Will is applying finishing touches to the arts and crafts piano stool.

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Almost happy with this now.

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Just want to try this in there.

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-Already that looks amazing.

-Happy days, cool.

-Lovely.

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Jay just needs to re-cover the seat before Helen returns to be reunited

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with her grandmother's renovated stool.

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-Hello.

-Hello, how are you?

-How are you?

-Very well, thank you.

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Nice to see you. I can't wait to see this.

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It looks like, and feels like...

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No, don't touch it.

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-No touching. All right.

-So, are you ready?

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-Yeah.

-You sure?

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Yeah.

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Oh, wow.

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It's just amazing.

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Thank you.

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Oh.

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It's just better than I thought.

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It'll be like having my gran with me when I play the piano.

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Cos she used to sit on one side, this side,

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and I used to sit on the other.

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Cos she always played the lower keys and I played the higher keys.

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You wouldn't know there was anything wrong with it, would you?

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No. One thing that I have done, though.

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I've actually used part of the original piece,

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which is right in the middle.

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-Yes, you said you would.

-And I've set it into a new piece of wood.

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I've actually kept a couple of the nibble marks cos I thought that

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would be quite nice to have some of the story.

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So is it pretty similar to how it was in the beginning before...?

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It's how I remember it.

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And it just looks proper now, doesn't it?

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It looks like it should be.

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-Yeah.

-It is amazing.

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-This feels better - there was always a dip.

-Yes.

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I have to learn to play the piano properly now, haven't I?

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Oh, dear.

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It's beautiful. I didn't think that you would be able to get this detail

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-back into it.

-I managed somehow.

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You can see his head getting a bit bigger.

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All in a day's work for me.

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I don't think you realise...

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..what you've all done, really.

0:17:070:17:09

Because my future now is definitely finding

0:17:090:17:13

and learning to play the music that my grandmother played.

0:17:130:17:17

-Thank you so much.

-Thank you.

0:17:170:17:19

Busy at his work station, genie of the lantern Richard Rigby

0:17:330:17:37

is casting an eye over all of the working parts.

0:17:370:17:40

Steve is playing the wizard's apprentice.

0:17:420:17:45

I need the brass for the flasher.

0:17:450:17:48

And I don't know what a flasher is.

0:17:500:17:52

So we will have to see what it does when it's all up together.

0:17:540:17:58

There must be some brass around here somewhere.

0:17:590:18:02

I need a disc of brass.

0:18:100:18:11

A disc of brass?

0:18:110:18:13

Why would I have a disc of brass?

0:18:130:18:14

I'm a wood man.

0:18:140:18:16

Jay, you haven't got any, have you?

0:18:160:18:18

Hold on, hold on.

0:18:180:18:20

No, I've used it all.

0:18:200:18:21

You must have something.

0:18:210:18:23

Don't come scrounging over here. You've got stuff over there, Steve.

0:18:230:18:26

I know you have, I've seen it. I've seen it.

0:18:260:18:29

What have you got in your...?

0:18:290:18:31

Get out of it! No, no, no. I have got nothing in here, mate.

0:18:310:18:35

-Don't shut all your drawers.

-It's all locked up, man.

0:18:350:18:37

It's all locked up. Everything's locked.

0:18:370:18:39

I could let you have that. That will get you away from here

0:18:390:18:42

and stop scrounging. All right.

0:18:420:18:45

-Is that all right?

-Have you got any thinner?

-Come on, come on.

0:18:450:18:49

It's almost the right size, isn't it?

0:18:490:18:51

-Perfect.

-That is almost the right size, so if I can flatten that...

0:18:510:18:54

Hold on a minute. "Thank you," wouldn't go amiss.

0:18:540:18:58

-Thank you, Jay.

-That's better.

0:18:580:19:00

-You're more than welcome, sir.

-Absolutely brilliant.

0:19:000:19:02

You should charge him, Jay, seriously, mate.

0:19:020:19:05

We're going to just try and get it back to its...

0:19:090:19:12

How it appeared originally.

0:19:120:19:14

The non-brass parts...

0:19:140:19:15

..need blacking.

0:19:170:19:18

This fits absolutely snugly.

0:19:270:19:29

There's a hole in the centre there that was for a thread for something,

0:19:290:19:32

so I found an old piece of grandfather clock cos I keep

0:19:320:19:37

old bits and pieces, so I'm just going to turn that up,

0:19:370:19:41

make a nice little plug for the end there and it will all look the part.

0:19:410:19:44

-How are we doing, Richard? Cor blimey.

-How are you?

-I am good.

0:19:530:19:55

-You stripped it apart, haven't you?

-I have.

-You've been busy.

0:19:550:19:58

The big problem was that she hadn't enough light coming through

0:19:580:20:02

to make it work nicely. We're going to use an LED.

0:20:020:20:05

How's that going to be powerful?

0:20:050:20:06

Well, you wait and see. It's incredibly powerful.

0:20:060:20:09

This is what we are going to fit. This is made to my own design.

0:20:090:20:12

-So this is going to go inside there?

-That is going to go inside there.

0:20:120:20:15

And then the LED light bulb goes in there, yeah?

0:20:150:20:17

Yeah. Lanterns always had the very latest light.

0:20:170:20:19

-Right.

-Didn't matter when the lantern was built,

0:20:190:20:22

the lanternist would use the latest available light.

0:20:220:20:24

That would then go in there through the condenser.

0:20:240:20:27

Yeah.

0:20:270:20:29

Through the lantern slide.

0:20:290:20:31

-Yes.

-Into the objective lens, and then be adjusted to perfection.

0:20:310:20:36

-Well, I'll let you crack on, then.

-Thank you.

0:20:360:20:39

-Hi, Steve.

-I've got another little job you might be able to help me with.

0:20:480:20:51

Oh, yeah. Let's have a look.

0:20:510:20:53

I just made this. The only trouble is, it's all brash and very new.

0:20:530:20:56

-Yeah.

-It would be nice if it was that sort of honey colour.

0:20:560:21:00

Oh, right. The whole thing?

0:21:000:21:02

Yes. Could you do that?

0:21:020:21:05

All right, well, I'll get on with that now, then.

0:21:050:21:07

I'll leave you with that so you have got the colour match.

0:21:070:21:09

OK, Steve. Thank you.

0:21:090:21:10

Brass task handed over,

0:21:170:21:19

Steve can return to his workbench to finish repairing

0:21:190:21:22

the 1920s daffodil phone.

0:21:220:21:24

I've identified the problem with it.

0:21:270:21:30

Basically, there is a nylon bearing that has worn out.

0:21:300:21:34

And I can't actually put a new nylon bearing into the place

0:21:360:21:42

that it should be.

0:21:420:21:43

So what I've done is, to compensate, I've put

0:21:430:21:45

a couple of washers in place and it actually works.

0:21:450:21:49

That turns round the full way and it does go back.

0:21:490:21:52

Although it's slowly, it works.

0:21:520:21:55

And it stops at the right position.

0:21:550:21:57

I'm going to put it back together again and then I'm going to clean

0:21:570:22:00

up the rest of it and polish it, and then it will all look lovely.

0:22:000:22:04

-Hello, Helen.

-Hello, Steve. Nice to see you again.

-How are you?

0:22:190:22:22

-I'm fine, thank you. You?

-Good.

0:22:220:22:24

So you have come for your daffodil telephone?

0:22:240:22:26

I have indeed and I'm very excited.

0:22:260:22:28

-Good.

-Hey.

0:22:280:22:30

Oh, wow.

0:22:310:22:33

And does the dial go round?

0:22:330:22:36

Try it.

0:22:360:22:37

It does!

0:22:370:22:39

-Yes.

-Fantastic.

0:22:390:22:40

-Absolutely.

-It's not been smartened up too much that it looks like

0:22:400:22:44

-a reproduction.

-Yeah, absolutely.

0:22:440:22:45

That's really lovely.

0:22:450:22:47

It was quite good fun, actually.

0:22:470:22:49

Was it?

0:22:490:22:51

Because the mechanism - I have never seen anything like it before,

0:22:510:22:54

but there are wheels

0:22:540:22:56

and a regulator that's very, very similar to a clock regulator.

0:22:560:23:00

Well, I'm thrilled to bits.

0:23:000:23:01

-Good.

-Thank you very much.

0:23:010:23:02

-You're very, very welcome.

-Bye-bye, then. Bye.

0:23:020:23:05

-And there you go.

-Amid the bustle of the workshop,

0:23:150:23:18

the repair of the magic lantern has turned into a real team effort.

0:23:180:23:22

-How are we doing?

-All right.

-You've got the light on?

0:23:250:23:28

Yes, I have. If you have a look in here, it's...

0:23:280:23:30

This is a...

0:23:320:23:34

Have you broken...? Oh, no, you haven't broken it.

0:23:340:23:36

-Is it meant to come out like that, then?

-It is ubiquitous, you see.

0:23:360:23:39

Yeah. So you're clever, aren't you?

0:23:390:23:42

-Well...

-Yes, you are.

0:23:420:23:43

It's very simple.

0:23:430:23:45

This is a bit tatty, isn't it?

0:23:460:23:47

It would be nice to replace it.

0:23:470:23:49

I suppose being an upholsterer, you might have something you can use.

0:23:490:23:52

Yeah, let's have a look.

0:23:520:23:54

Shall I take it out?

0:23:540:23:55

Yes, please. I will see if I've got anything.

0:23:550:23:57

All right, I've got two versions. I've got the clean one and the dirty one. Which one do you want?

0:24:010:24:05

Well, that is a difficult decision.

0:24:050:24:06

-It is, isn't it?

-Tell you what, let's go for the new one.

0:24:060:24:08

Go for the new one, the non-dirty one.

0:24:080:24:10

All right. It is not black but it's...

0:24:100:24:13

In fact, it is rather nice.

0:24:130:24:15

-Yeah?

-Yeah.

-Brown velvet.

0:24:150:24:16

Lovely match for the mahogany in the side changer.

0:24:180:24:22

-Cool.

-Wonderful, wonderful.

-So is it all right to take that?

0:24:220:24:24

-Yes, please.

-And then carry on. You sure I can't tempt you?

0:24:240:24:28

Really. Silly boy.

0:24:280:24:30

They say that many hands make light work.

0:24:320:24:34

Whilst Kirsten lacquers the brass flasher to give it antique patina,

0:24:340:24:40

Jay is on point with his needlework.

0:24:400:24:43

Oh, that is much better, isn't it?

0:24:460:24:48

Fantastic.

0:24:490:24:50

-There you go, Richard.

-Ah, Steve.

0:24:540:24:56

-Thank you.

-How is that?

0:24:560:24:58

Isn't that beautiful? Oh, wow.

0:24:580:25:01

That's going to be perfect.

0:25:010:25:03

From my little contribution...

0:25:030:25:04

Oh, you've done it. Oh, excellent. Now we can really get on.

0:25:040:25:07

-Yes.

-Now, you did put a hole either side to get this down?

0:25:070:25:12

Now you say that, hold on a minute...

0:25:120:25:14

-I'll stick it on there, then.

-Do you want to put it on?

-Yeah.

0:25:140:25:18

Nice bit of needlework there.

0:25:180:25:19

-It is a bit, isn't it?

-You're a craftsman.

0:25:190:25:21

I am a craftsman.

0:25:210:25:23

It's a historical magic.

0:25:260:25:29

If you can imagine before we had the magic lantern,

0:25:290:25:33

the only pictures the average person would see was either in church

0:25:330:25:36

or in a big house.

0:25:360:25:38

And then to suddenly find pictures appearing on walls,

0:25:380:25:41

whitewashed walls or a sheet of muslin, it was just magic.

0:25:410:25:44

And they called it magic.

0:25:440:25:45

I like the flasher. Look at that.

0:25:470:25:49

This is the house that Jack built.

0:25:490:25:51

-OK, cool.

-Well, I hope Judith and Ben enjoy it as much as I have,

0:25:510:25:55

and their children.

0:25:550:25:56

This is the special one. Wow.

0:25:560:25:58

It was artificial fireworks.

0:25:590:26:01

-You can see why, can't you?

-I'm getting motion sickness.

0:26:010:26:04

Nice to think it's going back three generations.

0:26:080:26:11

We've been through three generations with my lanterns with our children

0:26:120:26:15

and grandchildren, so it's just nice.

0:26:150:26:18

MEOWING

0:26:180:26:19

What was that?!

0:26:190:26:21

Easy!

0:26:210:26:23

Look at that. It's a dove. It's a dove.

0:26:230:26:26

LAUGHTER

0:26:260:26:28

-Here it is.

-Oh, wow.

0:26:400:26:41

-Shall we have a look what they've done?

-Let's have a look see.

0:26:410:26:44

Oh, wow. Oh, that is much better than it was.

0:26:440:26:47

He's totally polished it up, hasn't he?

0:26:470:26:48

Oh, it has got a little velvet curtain, how very sweet.

0:26:480:26:51

Oh, where's the lantern cover?

0:26:520:26:54

Oh, he's finished that up nicely, hasn't he?

0:26:540:26:56

Oh, that is dead serious.

0:26:560:26:59

A bit more professional than last time.

0:26:590:27:01

Very modern. My goodness me.

0:27:010:27:04

Is there something to sit it on?

0:27:040:27:05

Well, it is magnetised so it attaches itself to the bottom.

0:27:050:27:09

Oh, good gracious. This flips up and down properly now.

0:27:090:27:12

Oh, he's really done a fantastic job.

0:27:120:27:14

It looks ready for a show. Shall we set it up?

0:27:140:27:16

It will be very interesting to see what they think, won't it?

0:27:160:27:19

Magic lantern versus iPad - let's see which wins.

0:27:190:27:22

This is the story of Jack And The Beanstalk.

0:27:260:27:29

Once upon a time, there was a boy called Jack.

0:27:290:27:31

He lived with his widowed mother in a little cottage in the country.

0:27:310:27:35

I haven't seen anything like that before.

0:27:350:27:37

I liked it.

0:27:370:27:39

10 out of 10.

0:27:390:27:41

The giant was huge.

0:27:410:27:43

Fee-fi-fo-fum.

0:27:440:27:47

I smell the blood of an Englishman.

0:27:470:27:49

I really loved it.

0:27:490:27:52

It was lovely seeing the magic lantern again.

0:27:520:27:54

It was an echo from the past.

0:27:540:27:56

I saw the magic lantern as a little girl of five,

0:27:560:27:58

my children saw the lantern.

0:27:580:28:01

I could see the same expression on their faces.

0:28:010:28:03

And it was just like life ought to be in a family.

0:28:030:28:06

Jack and his mother lived happily ever after.

0:28:060:28:10

For more magical transformations,

0:28:170:28:19

join us next time in The Repair Shop.

0:28:190:28:22

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