So before you get all "a permission visit to Corah, what a moron".
We'd already covered the parts that weren't in use extensively over a number of visits and as Corah is a place quite close to my heart as my Grandma worked there for a number of years (and has regaled us with tales of her being made Supervisor so she was allowed to wander around the factory because they couldn't make her stay in the one room sewing buttons - J department, represent) we thought it might be worth the effort to see the parts in use by various companies.
Dweeb and I set off with high hopes of visiting multiple factories throughout the working day but alas a large number of them told us to politely eff off. Corah wasn't one of them. The pictures are from two different areas being used by two different companies. Both of which told us two very different stories about what they had been told with regards to development of the rest of the site.
One of the business owners told us that after Corah had closed all of the machines were sent off to India and because they wanted the original machines to use in the Factory they had had to spend quite a long time tracking them down and buying them back, quite amusing that they'd gone full circle.
After seeing many a derelict hosiery factory it was pretty amazing to see all the original machines in situ making clothing again (although apparently it was mostly for Primark)
We'd already covered the parts that weren't in use extensively over a number of visits and as Corah is a place quite close to my heart as my Grandma worked there for a number of years (and has regaled us with tales of her being made Supervisor so she was allowed to wander around the factory because they couldn't make her stay in the one room sewing buttons - J department, represent) we thought it might be worth the effort to see the parts in use by various companies.
Dweeb and I set off with high hopes of visiting multiple factories throughout the working day but alas a large number of them told us to politely eff off. Corah wasn't one of them. The pictures are from two different areas being used by two different companies. Both of which told us two very different stories about what they had been told with regards to development of the rest of the site.
One of the business owners told us that after Corah had closed all of the machines were sent off to India and because they wanted the original machines to use in the Factory they had had to spend quite a long time tracking them down and buying them back, quite amusing that they'd gone full circle.
After seeing many a derelict hosiery factory it was pretty amazing to see all the original machines in situ making clothing again (although apparently it was mostly for Primark)