"What the Victorians Did For Us" BBC Series

Tuesday, April 16, 2013 1 comments

My friend Emmelia pointed out this series from the BBC.

Looks fantastic, all 8 parts are available on Youtube.

The 8 episodes are entitled:

  • Speed Merchants
  • Playing God
  • Rule Makers
  • Crime and Punishment
  • Social Progress
  • Conquerors
  • Making it Big
  • Pleasure Seekers
Here is the first episode for a taste:



Thanks for pointing this one out Emmelia!

Update: Alas the BBC doesn't want YouTube to have these videos so they keeping getting taken down.
They are available from Amazon and your better video dealers.

Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ

The Nutcracker

Thursday, April 11, 2013 0 comments

Gadget!
Woo.



Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ

The Deadliest Game

Sunday, April 7, 2013 0 comments

Sorry for the lack of posts folks.
Was off on the west Coast for a week smile

Found this video linked at French Steampunk.

A short film from Media Design School based on the sci-fi world of Dr Grordbort created by writer and artist Greg Broadmore from Weta Workshop.

The live action/CGI film was created by 11 students over 22 weeks under the direction of 3D animation program leader James Cunningham.

Learn more about studying 3D animation and visual effects at Media Design School: www.mediadesignschool.com




Keep your sightglass ful, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ

Steam at Sea

Tuesday, March 26, 2013 0 comments

Steamships!

The adoption of steam power in shipping during the 19th century marks one of the greatest changes in global transportation that the World has ever see.  Prior to the adoption of steam power, shipping was always at the mercy of the wind and tides. Human powered vessels, like galleys and the Norse long boat, while swift were unsuitable for carrying bulk cargoes. Steam power made possible regular trans-oceanic shipping of bulk cargoes and enabled the rapid industrialization of many countries around the World.

This book "Steam at Sea", by Dennis Griffiths,  is a history of the 200 years of steam propulsion in sea going vessels. It is not a history of steamships but a history of the steam plants themselves. Filled with illustrations and diagrams this book is a masterful technical treatise and an entertaining historical analysis of the development and use of steam power for shipping. 

There are sections on the early use of steam power, the development of river vessels and then seagoing ones. Improvements in engines and propulsion systems including the triple expansion engine and the development of  turbines and even nuclear power plants. 

A highly recommended addition to any technical bookshelf!



Title
Steam at Sea
Two Centuries of Steam-powered Ships

Author
Denis Griffiths
B Eng.M Sc.PhD.CEng FIMarE

Publisher
Conway Maritime Press
London

Date
1997

ISBN
0-85177-666-3

Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ

 

Gangnam Steampunk Style

Monday, March 25, 2013 0 comments

Ummm...
Heh!



Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ


Fun with "Unintended Consequences"

Thursday, March 21, 2013 0 comments

Steampunk is all about what ifs!

These "what ifs" occur when a technological development happens at a different time than what history tells us it actually did. In the Steampunk Worlds we play with, this is the divergence that gives us the reason to play with alternate histories.

I was reading some online articles about technological developments during the 19th Century, the developments that lead to our current worlds in fact, trying to find points in time to do some "What If" brainstorming on, just for fun.  I came across this one at Civil War Trust which discusses the effect that the development of Whitney's Cotton Gin in 1794 had on the subsequent history of the American South.

 This machine revolutionized the process of separating cotton from its seed, making it dramatically faster and less expensive to turn picked cotton into usable cotton for textiles. Eli Whitney invented the gin in 1794, and by 1850 the tool had changed the face of Southern agriculture. Before Whitney’s gin entered into widespread use, the United States produced roughly 750,000 bales of cotton, in 1830. By 1850 that amount had exploded to 2.85 million bales. This production was concentrated almost exclusively in the South, because of the weather conditions needed for the plant to grow. Faster processing of cotton with the gin meant it was profitable for landowners to establish previously-unthinkably large cotton plantations across the south. But harvesting cotton remained a very labor-intensive undertaking. Thus, bigger cotton farms meant the need for more slaves. The slave population in the United States increased nearly five-fold in the first half of the 19th Century, and by 1860, the South provided about two-thirds of the world’s cotton supply. Southern wealth had become reliant on this one crop and thus was completely dependent on slave-labor.

This is a classic "unintended consequence" of technological development that was unlikely to have been foreseen by anyone at the time.

So if we look at some major technological darlings of Steampunk, like the Babbage Engine or Airships for example, one can see that the probable unintended consequences of actual utilization of these technologies would have dwarfed that of potentially the entire Industrial Revolution to that point. Both of these two, as just one example, are disruptive technologies, they influence many aspects of society and make possible much more rapid development of other technologies. Like the snowball effect that the microchip had in the 20th Century.

Many of Tesla's inventions, should they have been fully developed, would likely have done the same.

I think that is what makes Steampunk such an interesting genre to play with. We can keep the world mostly as it was for atmosphere, then change one development, the "What Ifs", and then let the unintended consequences run their course.

That my friends is Magick!

Keep your sightglass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ

Heavy Metal

Monday, March 18, 2013 0 comments

I love old industrial spaces!

This is a fantastic and moody shot.
What is this facility, what does, or did, it do?
The way it fades into the darkness beneath is awesomely mysterious too.

Found it online at Apostrophe9

Keep your sight glass full, your firebox trimmed and your water iced.
KJ

About Gears, Goggles, and Steam oh My!

Here I collect interesting bits of information related to the world of Steampunk.

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