A Day in Old Paris in 1910, in color
[60fps,Remastered] w/sound design added. MIND BLOWING!!!!
Enjoy!
”I colorized , restored and created a sound design for this rare video of View of the city of Paris in the summer of 1918, as well as in January 1919. Shows various districts and monuments of the city, including arrondissement I, arrondissement VI, arrondissement VIII, arrondissement IX, arrondissement XVI, Saint-Denis, the Latin Quarter Saint-Martin and others.
Video Restoration Process: ✔
FPS boosted to 60 frames per second ✔
Image resolution boosted up to HD ✔
Improved video sharpness and brightness ✔
Colorized only for the ambiance (not historically accurate) ✔
added sound design only for the ambiance ✔
restoration:(stabilisation,denoise,cleand,deblur) ✔
Face Restoration”
PERSPECTIVE: WWII STORIES
This diary was very well written and narrated. I had no intention of listening to such a long video but it was captivating. By the end I found myself worried about the young man finding out the fate of his fiance in the firebombed city. I must hear more of this.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QqIm7ikkSsA
BARTITSU!
Your answer to the Riffraff :)
A mix between jiu-jitsu, bare-knuckle boxing, and French kickboxing, Bartitsu became popular in Britain throughout the late 1890s. It was a way for the higher classes to defend themselves against “riff-raff,” as London was becoming increasingly dangerous.This gentlemanly way of defending oneself grew out of European fascination with Asian culture in the 1890s, along with worries about increases in crime. Edward William Barton-Wright, the inventor of Bartitsu, established a school for his new form of self-defense in London’s Soho neighborhood.Although Bartitsu has fallen out of favor in modern years in lieu of karate and judo, some people still practice the sport. In 2022, a gym in Chicago boasted Bartitsu lessons that were attended by many regulars. An interview revealed that participants loved that it was both historically relevant and great for muscular strength, coordination, and agility.Even if Bartitsu continues to lessen in popularity, it will never be completely erased from history. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle ensured this when he had his timeless main character Sherlock Holmes defend himself against nemesis Moriarty using the Bartitsu style of wrestling in the 1903 story “The Adventure of the Empty House.”[8]
https://listverse.com/2024/09/16/top-10-strange-ways-victorians-excercised/