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By Mark Green on

Exploring the museum’s secret warehouse

Mark Green explores some of the many items in our collection stores, from TV props to cinematography equipment.

Actually, there are two warehouses, and they’re not actually that secret. But our ‘offsite stores’, full of things we can’t fit in the collection rooms at Bradford, are places you won’t see on a tour of the museum—they’re too far away, being situated at Black Dyke (a former textile mill a few miles outside Bradford centre) and Swindon.

Toni Booth from Collections Management was happy to take me on a little guided tour of Black Dyke. It’s a foreboding place: floor upon floor of gigantic warehouse that puts you in mind of that final scene from Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade. Old TVs, movie posters, laserdiscs, computers, TV scenery and props… everywhere you look there’s another fascinating treasure from media’s past.

I had to keep my hands in my pockets, though. Pretty much everything is snugly smothered in bubble wrap, and of course there is no touching on pain of something even more unpleasant than what people get when they open the Ark of the Covenant.

Canisters of 35mm film

35mm films. Hundreds of them. If you’ve seen 35mm film canisters before, you’ll realise that these relatively small discs don’t contain enough film for full-length movies. That’s because this is our archive of TV commercials.

Yorkshire TV weather symbols

A box of the original weather symbols used by Yorkshire TV—in the days before electronic screens became common.

TV-AM logo

This will trigger memories of Roland Rat and Mad Lizzie for those of a certain age.

Unboxing the Akley 35mm Cinecamera

Opening up the boxed Akley 35mm Cinecamera: just one object from the Sarosh Collection, which features hundreds of cameras and projectors. We acquired it all just over two years ago.

Bob Godfrey’s workstation

It’s amazing what we found lurking in Black Dyke—including this, the original animation set-up of animator Bob Godfrey (of Henry’s Cat fame). Donated by Godfrey himself, it comes complete with the Apple II that controlled it all.

An American Werewolf in London videodisc

There’s a store of videodiscs—the gigantic precursors to DVDs—at Black Dyke. These aren’t the more commonly-known Laserdiscs: they’re CEDs, developed by RCA and housed in a non-removable plastic caddy.

Play School‘s Dapple the rocking horse

And finally… Yes, it’s the original Dapple from BBC schools programme Play School. The rest of the gang—Humpty Dumpty, Jemima and the rest—are on display in our TV gallery in Bradford.

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