【動画】250年前の機械仕掛けの白鳥がマジで生きてるみたいだと話題

挿話

250年前の機械仕掛けの白鳥が、まるで生きているかのように動く。1773年にジェームズ・コックスとジョン・ジョセフ・マーリンによって手作りされた。

This 250-year-old mechanical swan still moves like it's alive. Handcrafted in 1773 by James Cox and John Joseph Merlin.
byu/Justin_Godfrey inDamnthatsinteresting



コメント

  1. The video doesn’t do it justice. It sits on rippled glass rods that rotate giving the illusion of waves and flowing water. Little silver fish bob up between the rods, while the swan reaches down to catch them. A fish appears in the swan’s beak, when the swan sits up. The fish is flipped around in the beak and then swallowed. It’s been close to thirty years since we visited the Bowes Museum, so I don’t remember what all the swan did. At that time, they limited activating the swan to once an hour to reduce wear on the mechanism. I guess it’s once a day now. Anyway, I remember it made quite a noise as the clockwork gears and levers went through the complex routine. Truly amazing.

  2. Greeneyed_Wit より:

    Such an amazing piece. I’m a sucker for old automatons.

  3. VioEnvy より:

    How does a buyer change their mind after commissioning work! That’s fucked up 😡

  4. Slick_36 より:

    Automatons are so incredibly fascinating, and few are as beautiful as this one.  Uniting human craftsmanship with the beauty of nature.  Tell me this doesn’t feel divine in some way!

  5. nanomolar より:

    Really missed the opportunity to call it an automaswan.

  6. Shit_Shepard より:

    Glad to see swans will have their own terminators to battle

  7. Freddie-Murphy より:

    Of course a guy named Merlin was pulling off some magic hundreds of years ago

  8. CreativeCamelot より:
  9. This thing was ahead of its time. Those two did some great engineering.

  10. mxwill より:

    r/buyitforlife

  11. TrankElephant より:

    Older than the US and more functional as well.

  12. thecakeisali より:

    That’s insane I couldn’t imagine the effort that would go into making something like that today let alone 250 years ago. I wonder what it cost to make back then.

  13. Greenfieldfox より:

    I do not like the cobra chicken.

  14. shalelord より:

    Obadiah Stane: Michael made these in 1800‘s . With abunch of old tools!!!

  15. PoeticFurniture より:

    First post in a while that actually fits the sub’s title to a T.

  16. stonedboss より:

    for some reason i was waiting the entire time for the feathers to start moving lmao

  17. Stop looking at me, swan!

  18. nellysunshine より:

    County Durham!!!

  19. Dirmbz より:

    The text blocking the most interesting part of this video makes this a lot less interesting to me. Who thought that was a good idea?

  20. Zenitallin より:

    That must have felt like magic, or witchcraft. 250 years ago!

  21. redundanthero より:

    I really do know that’s ahead of its time, but I was also expecting a bit more…

  22. Ever_More_Art より:

    I can see now how ETA Hoffmann got the inspiration for Coppelia. These automatons look amazing.

  23. SunFflower8 より:

    Imagine being so clever that you could think and construct something so unique and beautiful. I would like to watch a documentary on the creators.

  24. IIllIllIIIll より:

    They don’t make mechanical swans like they used to. Picked one up the other day, immediately hit the shitter once it bit the neighbor boy.

    Good product, just needs to be more durable like this one

  25. jobit23392 より:

    So dipshit buyers with insane demands cancelling last minute hasn’t changed in 250 years.

  26. hare-hound より:

    Why does this make my heart glow

  27. burudoragon より:

    No luck catching them swans then…

  28. ndubitably より:

    $10 says it’s just some 270 year old Turk inside /s

  29. dargonmike1 より:

    It survived that many years without being repaired? That’s pretty insane

  30. C1NDY1111 より:

    Absolutely genius

  31. jerremiass より:

    Why did this make me feel emotional

  32. This thing is so cool. Love every time I come across it.

  33. >rich people commission artwork then don’t pay

    History of the World, Part 1

  34. Carbon-Base より:

    That’s one amazing swansong from those guys.

  35. fisherman105 より:

    You know this blew some minds back in the day swing something move like this even if it was a short amount of time

  36. fisherman105 より:

    You know this blew some minds back in the day seeing something move like this even if it was a short amount of time

  37. gumball_00 より:

    Absolutely stunning piece!!

  38. Older than America

  39. Automaswan

  40. This was a recreation of a skinwalker the creator had seen while bird watching, it’s actually a very interesting story, [Article](https://youtu.be/dQw4w9WgXcQ?si=hjYh8jEBKY_bCX7-)

  41. 4193-4194 より:

    [The Musee Mecanique](https://museemecanique.com/) in San Francisco is a great stop with several vintage scenes. None quite like this. But with a pocket full of quarters you can browse and see all sorts of mechanical automations, nickelodeons, early pinball… Just a great spot.

  42. Merlin is a bit of a legend tbh. Invented in-line skates too.

  43. Mile_High_ より:

    It’s an impressive sculpture, but the chimes seem really off. I couldn’t make-out any kind of rhythm.

  44. gt_tony1986 より:

    I hate to be that person, but who puts subtitles in the way like that? Just slapped in the middle covering the action… Anyway, the swan is incredible!

  45. PhotoBN1 より:

    I randomly came across this documentary about Automatons that featured this swan. Its worth a watch if you’ve got an hour to spare [Here](https://youtu.be/6Nt7xLAfEPs)

  46. RSCALES11 より:

    They really just made it do a bunch of lefts and rights with a couple sips of fake water and called it a day.

  47. MagicHamsta より:

    …..It was alive before??!?!? When did it die?

    >This 250-year-old mechanical swan **still moves like it’s alive.**

  48. averagecolours より:

    definitely master craftmem

  49. CompetitveEmu より:

    Oh my god my granny used to take me to see this all the time when I was a kid 🙁

  50. BucktoothJew より:

    That fish in the beak was crazy.