The Broadford works is a stunning collection of mills dating from 1908 to 1914. It would be of great interest for anyone with an eye for industrial architecture, and I'm thrilled to hear that for once it's importance has been realised and all the buildings of merit are to be preserved. The scale of the works is enough to blow me away, but the fact that such a huge site can be packed to the rafters with epicness is pretty much beyond me. I have to stop every few steps to soak up another fixture or fitting, another packet or box from an era long gone. I love the place and I feel that after this trip I have seen the vast majority of the place.
This report is not really a tour of the works like my work usually is as it has been covered in other reports, but just a set of snaps of odds and ends I found interesting, and I am sure the likeminded people on this forum will too.
Strong room
1918 letterhead, advertising Richards as a wool and flax spinner, dyer and bleachers.
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9 number memory
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I LOVE this piece of graffiti, despite the fact I will never know who it was drawn about or the exact nature of the joke, I just love the andy capp esque artwork. So much so I have drawn it out to have stuck on the wardrobe
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Board room or manager's office has lavish plasterwork. In fact the whole office block did, but most was hidden from view by a false ceiling.
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I insist on electric finish. Nothing else will do
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This was a hand made crate... made of leather!! It was a piece of art in itself.
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Nice work in finding a stencil that fits the box:crazy
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This banister was made of a single piece of wood, and was a real beautiful piece of carpentry
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Graffiti in the storage bays
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Is it just me, or are the floozeys in newspapers getting to be a lower standard:
1985
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1995
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This report is not really a tour of the works like my work usually is as it has been covered in other reports, but just a set of snaps of odds and ends I found interesting, and I am sure the likeminded people on this forum will too.
Strong room
1918 letterhead, advertising Richards as a wool and flax spinner, dyer and bleachers.
View attachment 109609
View attachment 109611
View attachment 109612
View attachment 109614
View attachment 109616
View attachment 109617
9 number memory
View attachment 109619
I LOVE this piece of graffiti, despite the fact I will never know who it was drawn about or the exact nature of the joke, I just love the andy capp esque artwork. So much so I have drawn it out to have stuck on the wardrobe
View attachment 109620
Board room or manager's office has lavish plasterwork. In fact the whole office block did, but most was hidden from view by a false ceiling.
View attachment 109622
I insist on electric finish. Nothing else will do
View attachment 109624
This was a hand made crate... made of leather!! It was a piece of art in itself.
View attachment 109626
View attachment 109628
View attachment 109629
Nice work in finding a stencil that fits the box:crazy
View attachment 109631
View attachment 109632
View attachment 109634
This banister was made of a single piece of wood, and was a real beautiful piece of carpentry
View attachment 109635
Graffiti in the storage bays
View attachment 109637
View attachment 109639
View attachment 109640
View attachment 109642
View attachment 109643
View attachment 109645
Is it just me, or are the floozeys in newspapers getting to be a lower standard:
1985
View attachment 109647
1995
View attachment 109649