Leonardo Da Vinci's Codex Leicester Replica!

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  • čas přidán 21. 08. 2024
  • Adam shares with us another piece from his collection of "impossible objects"--replicas of artifacts that we would never be able to touch and examine in person. This is Stefano Tartaglione's recreation of Leonardo Da Vinci's Codex Leicester--a collection of the artist's scientific writings and illustrations under one folio. As with the other Da Vinci codex replica Adam owns, this is a meticulous paper sculpture in its own right and the experience of flipping through its pages is akin to a time machine.
    Adam's previous examination of a Da Vinci codex replica: • Adam Savage's Leonardo...
    Find these replica notebooks here: www.collezione... / collezioneapocrifadavinci
    Learn more about the original notebooks: www.vam.ac.uk/...
    Shot and edited by Joey Fameli
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Komentáře • 367

  • @tested
    @tested  Před 2 lety +11

    Adam's previous examination of a Da Vinci codex replica: czcams.com/video/kRXcDIwq4XM/video.html
    Find these replica notebooks here: www.collezioneapocrifadavinci.it/ facebook.com/CollezioneApocrifadaVinci/
    Learn more about the original notebooks: www.vam.ac.uk/articles/leonardo-da-vincis-notebooks

    • @danielallen7384
      @danielallen7384 Před 2 lety

      Hey Adam, first off I'd like to say I really do enjoy your show. I've watched almost every video you've done. I also was a big fan of Mythbusters. Well, up until the episode where you guys tried to show that using thermite couldn't burn a hole through the roof of a car. I know the shows agenda was to debunk 9/11 conspiracy theorist about the thermite charges in the buildings. But what you guys did was not right. And I believe truly you knew it. It was really hard to deny it when a guy made a video on CZcams showing you could take a fraction of the thermite you guys used to cut through steel beams. I'm not here to try and argue the whole conspiracy thing. I just wanted to let you know that episode killed the show for me and it's credibility. True fans of science and engineering want the truth. Not a agenda. Which I thought up until that episode you guys were. Love what you're doing now and I hope you continue to post your videos.

  • @JerseyPB
    @JerseyPB Před 2 lety +144

    Thanks Adam. FYI - Leicester is a town a few miles from my parents and is pronounced “ Lester “ in the UK.

    • @MyklCarlton
      @MyklCarlton Před 2 lety +10

      Properly pronounced Lester everywhere in the English-speaking world.

    • @j_taylor
      @j_taylor Před 2 lety +5

      It's pronounced the same way in western Massachusetts.
      (When I lived in Worcester, MA, I heard some creative pronunciations too!)

    • @MissLilyputt
      @MissLilyputt Před 2 lety +3

      @@j_taylor Worcester and Worcestershire sauce are always words that people can’t properly pronounce. I only learned the correct pronunciation because an old co-worker was born and raised in Worcester, Mass.

    • @engineeredlifeform
      @engineeredlifeform Před 2 lety +8

      I misheard Adam at first, and thought local Leicester notable Thomas Cook had purchased the Codex, but it was Thomas Coke, 1st Earl of Leicester. Still cool, as I never knew there was a Leicester connection. I would say Adam should come visit, given Leicester is home of the National Space Centre (I can see it from my home office) but I think after visiting NASA and the Smithsonian, he'd be disappointed. Although the Pumping Station Museum is defo worth a look. I am now perusing more affordable facsimiles.

    • @itsblackseph
      @itsblackseph Před 2 lety +6

      politely Paul, as a fellow child of the shire (I remember the days of the Shires shopping centre) I believe it is actually pronounced "Lesta mate innit?" :'D

  • @wayne_taylor
    @wayne_taylor Před 2 lety +38

    I hope a TV Production Company is watching this and would make a programme with Adam Called Impossible Objects, where he gets to go and visit people who make these types of replicas and dicuss their process, it would be amazing.

  • @beaker_guy
    @beaker_guy Před 2 lety +72

    I remember visiting the Adam Savage museum in 2,452 C.E. The AI recreation of Adam was a little tired that day because people wouldn't stop asking it, "What ever happened to Buster?" But then the museum staff robots brought in the AI recreation of Leonardo da Vinci ... The chat between Adam and Leo was very touching to see. ;-)
    (something to look forward to in just 430 years.)

  • @nikkia9506
    @nikkia9506 Před 2 lety +5

    An exhibition of some of Leonardo's work came to a gallery near me. An artist and scientist. Getting my nose to within inches of his drawings was amazing. It still makes me smile when I think about it.

    • @lbon5479
      @lbon5479 Před 2 lety +2

      I went to an exhibition like that when I was 10 and it left such an impression, one of my fondest memories.

  • @kennyH20
    @kennyH20 Před 2 lety +4

    I remember a pc game back in the mid 90’s called The Journeyman Project and one of the missions was to go to Davinci’s workshop and finish some of his projects or solve problems with them. Loved that game.

  • @waimanlam3035
    @waimanlam3035 Před 2 lety +211

    Waiting for someone to correct how Adam pronounses Leicester.

    • @judgedread-q4t
      @judgedread-q4t Před 2 lety +5

      I beat you to it, lol!

    • @Warriorbox
      @Warriorbox Před 2 lety

      You'll do :¬)

    • @nikkia9506
      @nikkia9506 Před 2 lety +9

      You'd think a chap of his intellect would've heard it mentioned before, but then I thought of Kansas and Arkansas and remembered he'd grown up with that insanity 😆

    • @Bulldog1878
      @Bulldog1878 Před 2 lety +20

      I'm here to correct you on how you spell 'pronounces'

    • @gamernick1533
      @gamernick1533 Před 2 lety +1

      @@Bulldog1878 beat me to it :P

  • @ezpoppy55
    @ezpoppy55 Před 2 lety

    I’ll say it again: an Adam Savage Cabinet of Curiosity, filled with Impossible Objects, is a must-do project for you.
    My family and I were lucky enough in late February 2020 (just before the world shut down) to see - no, experience - the mammoth da Vinci exhibition at the Louvre Museum. What a mind altering experience. They had several of the Codices (?) on display, though of course, you could only see (not touch!) one spread due to how they were understandably displayed.
    You’re absolutely right - the facsimiles allow the holder in flip through, to stop, go back, to peruse or simply glance, at whatever catches their attention. Time and time again. What a treat, and I’m glad to see you enjoying it!
    And yes I agree - da Vinci made these to show others what was going on in his mind. On display at the Louvre was a rumination of da Vinci’s about how, if one added up the thicknesses of all the branches and twigs of a tree, that sum would equal the total thickness of that tree’s trunk - which centuries later, would be described with a new term, fractals. Mind blowing!
    Enjoy Adam. That is why makers create.

  • @Eremon1
    @Eremon1 Před 2 lety +22

    The Arm & Hammer company used the name 30 years before Armand Hammer obtained the stocks in Church & Dwight(the company that owned Arm & Hammer). It's literally just a weird coincidence. Love your videos, cheers.

  • @paulharries696
    @paulharries696 Před 2 lety +11

    Now we just need Steffano to create the book that Gurney Halleck reads from in Dune 2021, the Orange Catholic Bible. Each time I watch Dune I think how amazing it would be to own a copy of that prop. How about a one-day build with Steffano and Adam??

  • @eo151
    @eo151 Před 2 lety +14

    Great, thanks Adam! Now I want a Savage T-Shirt of Leonardo's Canned Peaches.

  • @cgbspender1113
    @cgbspender1113 Před 2 lety +3

    I also love that idea Adam. I'd love to be able to create a series of museums where people could handle high end replicas or more replaceable real items. I'd love to do this with the dead sea scrolls or the US founding documents.

  • @billgalloway1799
    @billgalloway1799 Před 2 lety +2

    I was lucky enough to see some of his sketchbooks at the Tate London in the early 80,s I will never forget it.

  • @sexysegol3655
    @sexysegol3655 Před 2 lety

    7:46 In a way, this chanel is like a museum. Your thoughts, builds and stories are all immortalized on the internet.

  • @Jamesfrancosdog
    @Jamesfrancosdog Před 2 lety +3

    DaVinci was a one of a kind human. If I could go back in time and have dinner with anyone, it would be him. Although I don’t know Italian, so that might be awkward.

  • @reflectionsofservice784

    As a curious sidenote, the Earl of Leicester also had dirty hands, but he pronounced it "dart-ee-yee". ;) Yet another enjoyable video folks, thank you.
    - One of my most prevalent memories of the early days of the pandemic is watching and listening to Adam as he worked in his shop each day... Sometimes doing projects and sometimes so obviously unable to mentally advance on major projects that he just worked on anything he could to keep his hands moving while he worked through the emotions of the world as it pertained to him and those around him. These videos have been immensely helpful to me and a place of solace in my own times of grief and confusion these last couple of years. Thank you to everyone (especially Adam) that works on these videos which act as a salve to my soul.

  • @FectacularSpail
    @FectacularSpail Před 2 lety +1

    We all know DaVinci was a brilliant human being, but what I find really fascinating is that he was a brilliant human being right near the end of the era where a single brilliant human being could actually learn pretty much everything that was known to humanity up to that point.

  • @bellablue5285
    @bellablue5285 Před 2 lety +45

    Interestingly for old documents/books, the white gloves can cause more damage in some cases, and folks use well scrubbed bare hands to handle.
    Still such a cool reproduction to have and handle

    • @nikkia9506
      @nikkia9506 Před 2 lety +10

      The earliest document I've handled dated back to the 1300s, and no white gloves. They're definitely a no-no, because they dampen your fingers sensitivity, and that's how accidents have happened. Thoroughly washed and rinsed hands are definitely the way to go, with no hand products.
      I would love one of these reproductions. Amazing piece of work.

    • @SeanStephensDarkElfLX
      @SeanStephensDarkElfLX Před 2 lety +3

      Indeed white gloves are only for certain materials, use of them for documents has become much more rare. Some materials can often deteriorate from a LACK of oils provided by a gentle touch

  • @Sotonshades
    @Sotonshades Před 2 lety +28

    As someone born and raised in Leicester, every pronunciation of lie-sess-ter hurts my brain (for those curious, it should be more lik Less-ter). However the wonder of everything else in the video helped me power through it.

    • @TrevorNunes
      @TrevorNunes Před 2 lety

      I think every Brit hates it too it’s “Lester” and sounds wierd when phonetically spoke “ lie cest ish ire” but video is still very cool.

  • @Morsoth
    @Morsoth Před 2 lety +1

    Hahaha! I'm one of the those who made a comment about handling the book with dirty hands! I know it's a replica, but I would have washed my hand 10 times anyway to protect the 'replicated original stains'!!! :)

  • @damonbrentnall5907
    @damonbrentnall5907 Před 2 lety +7

    Lucky that the Earl didn't live just up the road in Loughborough...

    • @judgedread-q4t
      @judgedread-q4t Před 2 lety

      😂😂 Good one!

    • @bellablue5285
      @bellablue5285 Před 2 lety

      How's that one pronounced? La-bra? La- burra?
      Edit - yeah never mind, that's a bit of a doozy

    • @stamfordly6463
      @stamfordly6463 Před 2 lety +1

      Ironically this particular earl lived at Holkham Hall in Norfolk.

    • @timhooper833
      @timhooper833 Před 2 lety

      @@stamfordly6463 Norfolk; where the way a word is spelt has very little to do with the way it's pronounced 🙂

    • @bellablue5285
      @bellablue5285 Před 2 lety

      @@timhooper833 oh I lived by Norfolk, VA for a time, that was a fun one. I can't repeat here how most of the folks there pronounced it (think nah-[expletive], that's close enough), no idea how that relates to the English pronunciation, but it's fun

  • @nerdoutside6545
    @nerdoutside6545 Před 2 lety +60

    Leicester is pronounced “lester”.
    Source; I live in Leicester :D

    • @j.r.millstone
      @j.r.millstone Před 2 lety

      I too, live in Leicester and can confirm it's pronounced 'lester'. Though I almost definitely live in a different Leicester than you. lol

    • @nerdoutside6545
      @nerdoutside6545 Před 2 lety

      @@j.r.millstone not the one in England?

    • @j.r.millstone
      @j.r.millstone Před 2 lety

      @@nerdoutside6545 Nope, New England.

    • @solistheonegod
      @solistheonegod Před 2 lety

      Lestah would be the way most of us would say it. 😂

    • @gasstationpeanuts1814
      @gasstationpeanuts1814 Před 2 lety

      Payback for some of your countrymen calling Ibiza "eye-bee-fah"...

  • @cameron5802
    @cameron5802 Před 2 lety

    I really want to see more of Adam's collection of items like these. Incredible things.

  • @Kremit_the_Forg
    @Kremit_the_Forg Před 2 lety +3

    For anyone interested, found an old etsy link on their Facebook page:
    The Codex Forster sold for 3250€.

  • @peterkelley6344
    @peterkelley6344 Před 2 lety +8

    Adam seems to like to have "Impossible Collections", and oddly that's kinda cool.

    • @maggs131
      @maggs131 Před 2 lety

      I personally would like a translation to accompany this amazing piece

  • @johnmcgimpsey1825
    @johnmcgimpsey1825 Před 2 lety +4

    The Library of Congress recommends that manuscripts NOT be handled with white gloves, but with clean dry hands. This reduces the chances of tearing pages and transfer, since gloves often carry more dirt than hands do. Exceptions are where skin oils may be more damaging, such as with photographs or items with metal parts.

    • @Rockmaster867
      @Rockmaster867 Před 2 lety

      I could never have dry hands when handling priceless objects. I would rather put on surgical gloves

  • @lightbornadventures
    @lightbornadventures Před 2 lety

    I love Adam's shirt! Another great video!

  • @jeffreyhalpern5718
    @jeffreyhalpern5718 Před 2 lety +1

    So. Years ago I was obsessed with Katsushika Hokusai. The man mad about drawing. You know his wave and many others. Well. I managed to get two books of the first printings from 181r and 1817 he published for artists. They were manga. I also have many Kunisada (Toyokuni III). To hold them is to take a step back in time. I know the feeling well.

  • @Voirreydirector
    @Voirreydirector Před 2 lety

    Doctor David Rosen introduced me to the concept of the Renaissance Wondercabinet, pieces of furniture or even whole rooms of weird stuff folks would collect to try and understand the world. In the world of words I think the equivalent would be a Commonplace book, a collection of great quotes, drawings and such put together from day to day notes. So da Vinci wasn’t odd in collecting such notes, nor are you unusual in adoring, collecting and learning from impossible objects. You are indeed a Renaissance Man.

  • @maggs131
    @maggs131 Před 2 lety +1

    My great great grandfather often told stories how he met leonardo davinci and learned so much from him

  • @fini3581
    @fini3581 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember about a scene from „Voyager - Star Trek“ when Captain Janeway talks with Da Vinci at the Holodeck ☺️
    Maybe some day..

  • @wesbrevig5772
    @wesbrevig5772 Před 2 lety +1

    Adam - I strongly suggest you read Walter Isaacson’s biography, it’s wonderful! The hardcover is a piece of art.

  • @CosminNeagu
    @CosminNeagu Před 2 měsíci

    Just seen Atlanticus like 3 hours ago. Those papers have an incredible presence. Portrait Of A Musician was there too. Even if you don't have the plaque on the side, you know what's that.

  • @rabbitholeaverted9373
    @rabbitholeaverted9373 Před 2 lety

    We need to organize a community museum that just rotates through various displays from private collections of local makers & collectors & amateurs & hobbiests. Heaps of people have amazing stuff that no-one ever sees because we lack a public space to share with each other. So much accumulated passion in these endeavors and so few windows to it.

  • @RjWolf3000
    @RjWolf3000 Před 2 lety

    Somehow i think Leonardo’s work will hold its value more than the NFT’s going for twice his works these days

  • @janetvaughn5183
    @janetvaughn5183 Před 2 lety

    Gates displayed the actual codex at the Seattle Art Museuem after buying the Codex. It was so nice to see the actual pages

  • @MxPinky
    @MxPinky Před 2 lety

    Truly enjoying all of these so so much

  • @billybonesthepirate2025

    hey sir, I’ve been a fan phone all the time because I’ve been watching MythBusters from grandmas house. It was way back and yeah I’ve been in a field run on time, so doing a good job and I love your channel and I did describe your channel so keep up the good work.

  • @keef5543
    @keef5543 Před 2 lety +3

    Love you Adam but I love the correct pronunciation of British place names more

  • @TheUnthaw
    @TheUnthaw Před 2 lety +3

    I would for sure visit the Adam Savage Museum!

  • @LycaonsMemories
    @LycaonsMemories Před 2 lety +2

    i honestly wonder if leonardo made the codices himself, or if he pushed it off onto his apprentices. on the one hand the thought of him going over his own notes and recreating them is nice, but the knowledge that he was so busy and had so many things going at once that he probably just had one of the kids do it is high

  • @Warshipmodelsunderway
    @Warshipmodelsunderway Před 2 lety +1

    When you were relating your peach story, I flashed back to "Deadwood" and immediately hoped there was no unauthorized cinnamon.

  • @Volamek
    @Volamek Před 2 lety

    I like how you, seemingly intentionally, kept zooming in on your "disgusting hands" as to prove a point. Keep doing you! Thanks for the great content, as always.

  • @PRAYINMANTIS12
    @PRAYINMANTIS12 Před 2 lety

    Beautiful! Thank you again Adam!

  • @drakedragonking4698
    @drakedragonking4698 Před 2 lety +3

    I would love to have a copy of these for my personal library

  • @timothycormier3494
    @timothycormier3494 Před 2 lety

    I like your tee-shirt Adam!!

  • @rifflesby
    @rifflesby Před 2 lety

    Adam, you mentioned making your own paper props in the previous codex video - this is something i’m into too, not having the workspace or tools for more elaborate propmaking. I’d love to see a video on your own techniques/tricks/experiments with aging and weathering paper, such as different paper stock, different stains, different methods to simulate different kinds of damage, and so on.

  • @inmemoriamliberocircuire2573

    This is just awesome

  • @Zonker66
    @Zonker66 Před 2 lety +8

    I love the free sharing of knowledge and art. Hate those that hoard either and try to own it. What an evil thing to do. I'd feel reverence even touching a copy of such a thing.

    • @twitte0king
      @twitte0king Před 2 lety +1

      You are forgetting that by “sharing”, adam and tested are earning ad revenue. If they are really up for sharing, they would have a museum open to public, making videos are merely an extension of sharing with a friend behind close door for bragging right. There are many more museum docents clock in dayindayout educating kids and adults alike with a fraction of the money that this video makes. Their jobs are seriously hurt by the pandemic. I hope we can have a way to support them soon!

    • @adamcool9318
      @adamcool9318 Před 2 lety

      @@twitte0king yeah but its still sharing cause its free. Even sharing at a small cost is good as the money has to go into the work it takes to restore, keep and show the items

    • @nicklang7670
      @nicklang7670 Před 2 lety

      @@twitte0king There are billionaires that own unique things in their 'generational wealth' that might be destroyed before anyone is able to see it. Like old books. And then there are some people so rich like the Saudi Crown Prince that bought a fake DaVinci and try to make it as real to people as possible. Either way great art can be public art where it remains as the artist intended. Google's search and images is the opposite, where everything is copied and distorted from it's original intentions. And Google does it all for-profit. Which is why people say Google has a conflict of interest and they are made to delete people's art and work. One of the main reasons the public needs to be involved with how we digest information. When politicians and courts do not act in the publics favour and art is disseminated to be unfavourable to them, private ownership is almost the last stand. What I think people are saying is that if some rich art collector owns great art they need to be a trusted individual to act as a steward of the people. And rich people tend not to see the working class as equals.

  • @mr.wardensworkshop
    @mr.wardensworkshop Před 2 lety

    We must work to get Adam to a the House on the Rock, a collection of collections of wondrous objects and mysterious items that is enormous and wonderful and unfathomable

  • @kathleenpractices
    @kathleenpractices Před 2 lety +1

    SO COOL!!! Thanks for sharing.

  • @exileacid7627p
    @exileacid7627p Před 2 lety +71

    Leicester is pronounced "LESS-STIR" :P
    Here is an awesome Map Men video for the history of why British place names are so varied.
    czcams.com/video/uYNzqgU7na4/video.html

    • @heesoo18
      @heesoo18 Před 2 lety

      That was really entertaining

    • @Bulldog1878
      @Bulldog1878 Před 2 lety +10

      🤣🤣 It's fucking not lad, it's pronounced LESTER.

    • @exileacid7627p
      @exileacid7627p Před 2 lety +6

      ​@@Bulldog1878 The problem with breaking it down like that, is the assumption that everyone agrees those syllables are pronounced in the same way, in all words and dialects of English, but they are not. "LES" can and is often pronounced with a Z sound at the end, ( Lesley, Lesleigh, Lesmond, Lesbian ) and due to the Vowel shift that occurred in the English language "E" in general can be used in a word in multiple ways "See the video linked above".
      By using the already existing words in the English language "LESS" and "STIR" that confusion is dramatically reduced as even over a wide range of words and dialects in the English speaking world those word sounds are far more consistent in their pronunciation. Remember the goal of phonetics is to make the sound hearable to the reader not the writer.
      SO just because you know in your minds ear that "Les-Ster" is pronounced the way you pronounce it, some one else could read it as "Lez-Stah" in their dialect or from words they are using in their head to pull the sounds form...
      :P

    • @indysgill
      @indysgill Před 2 lety

      I live in Leicester and not heard it ever pronounced that way.

    • @exileacid7627p
      @exileacid7627p Před 2 lety

      ​@@indysgill Which way are you referring too, you live in Leicester (presumably the English Leicester in Leicestershire) and already know the pronunciation of your town. If you are from Leicester, Massachusetts in the USA, you would pronounce it as Adam does in the video. Hearing language sounds from written text is entirely based on a readers bias of their currently familiar or "installed" (to use the comparable phrase from computing) version of the English dialect and regionalisation they have in their head. So as an English person yourself, lets pretend the town Leicester does not exist and you do not already know the pronunciation of it, and I said it is pronounced "Les-Ster". As an English person you in your head you may go, "ok, Les, like Les Dennis, and "Ster" like the end of the word Gangster" so now combine those two sounds together and you will get kind of close but not quite as Les in this instance would have that Z sound. If I told you combine the words "less" and "stir" together to form one word, if you say it out it will be far closer to the actual pronunciation, and that's the tricky thing about phonetics, unless you know the phonetic symbolic alphabet dedicated for word sounds, for example æ,ʌ,ʊ,ɒ,ə, which most people do not, you have to find common ground on pronounced words just to get as close a result as possible over the broadest range of heavily regionalised English speaking dialects.

  • @awandererfromys1680
    @awandererfromys1680 Před 2 lety

    4:55 With books and manuscripts the general rule is to not wear gloves at all. Just wash and dry your hands thorougly before handling. If there's a health hazard (mold, arsenic), then vinyl gloves are recommended.
    The reason is that gloves, particularly fibrous ones, can cause damage simply by snagging on a corner or edge. Or pull of pigments from the page. A book can be dropped if the gloves are too loose or slippery.
    Source: Keith the Head Librarian explained this once over on Objectivity.

  • @LCFC81
    @LCFC81 Před 2 lety +2

    This is where he designed Jamie Vardy, the perfect striker.

  • @JessTheTrans87
    @JessTheTrans87 Před 2 lety

    Love your shirt Adam!! I need one of those

  • @woodsteel8342
    @woodsteel8342 Před 2 lety

    Love his shirt!

  • @fen4554
    @fen4554 Před 2 lety

    1:54 "There are times when I find myself transfixed by the shadow on the wall. Of the splash of water against stone. I stare at it, the hours pass, the world around me drops away. Replaced by worlds being created and destroyed by my imagination. A way to focus the mind."

  • @mbarr691
    @mbarr691 Před 2 lety

    Hey Adam! one movie prop I think you need/make is the bathroom buddy from Gremlins. LOL

  • @OmegaPointZen
    @OmegaPointZen Před rokem

    One of the cars in Raiders Of The Lost Ark was made in Leicester.

  • @pgkr67
    @pgkr67 Před 2 lety

    Dude, i love this 😊

  • @peckenstein
    @peckenstein Před 2 lety

    So i just heard we're getting a museum exhibit of Adams stuff. He said it himself. I'd like a ticket please and thank you!

  • @mustachedave7042
    @mustachedave7042 Před 2 lety

    ‘Impossible Objects with Adam Savage’ Tuesday’s on Discovery

  • @TRKTKO
    @TRKTKO Před 2 lety

    I love that!

  • @gumboe2007
    @gumboe2007 Před 2 lety

    Oh man, canned peaches! I haven't had them for decades, I will this week though. Thanks Adam 😁

  • @JR10electro
    @JR10electro Před 2 lety

    I love that he wrote his codecs backwards.

  • @rustyshakleford5230
    @rustyshakleford5230 Před 2 lety +1

    I didn't know Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles had their own lore and background. You learn something everyday on Tested!

  • @TheZogislost
    @TheZogislost Před 2 lety

    Adams notebooks are the “Savage Codices” numbered chronologically. And their value only increases with time

  • @tpseeker3367
    @tpseeker3367 Před 2 lety +1

    Was that a future build Easter Egg on the table by Adams right shoulder🤔🤔🤔? Or has he already done a build video on it?
    After watching this 2nd vid of Adam showing Davinci's codex, how many of you have actually started googling Any of Leonardo Davinci's work?
    Thank You Adam for All that You do to Help people learn & spread the Curiosity 🐛 Bug.

    • @Jamesfrancosdog
      @Jamesfrancosdog Před 2 lety

      DaVinci has been my favorite artist since high school (2005), and I would encourage you to dive headfirst into DaVincis notebooks! His artwork is of course fantastic but his sketches are my favorite 🙌🏼 there are a few great coffee table books of his work that examine it in great detail and those are also worth finding!

    • @tpseeker3367
      @tpseeker3367 Před 2 lety

      There was a tv show that was making life sized Davinci creations @@Jamesfrancosdog . It only lasted one season.

  • @madArt1981
    @madArt1981 Před 2 lety

    Vellum benefits from the oil of the hands keeping it from drying and cracking

  • @theotherohlourdespadua1131

    So, when will Adam be given a copy of the Codex Atlanticus...

  • @natebell4764
    @natebell4764 Před 2 lety +1

    I think it would be an interesting project to do a mock digital version of the museum of the Savage mind. the Savage Digital Mind Museum and Playground. Or something.

  • @josephgioielli
    @josephgioielli Před 2 lety +1

    They don't wear white gloves when handling paper anymore. The gloves make you more likely to tare the paper. Too hard to manipulate the pages. They just use clean, dry hands.

  • @aserta
    @aserta Před 2 lety +1

    Going by the sheen and sound of the paper, likely a wax printer. I've made my own copy of the Voynich manuscript, they are a pain in the ass to operate, maintain and work, but the outcome is properly some of the best out there, especially the more color values. Not cheap tho. You can easily rack up one and a half grand at the end of the journey.
    I used a particular paper my grandfather saved from his days in the movie industry (usually used for posters back in the day). The commies didn't have some of the things the West had back in the day, and as the Soviets robbed most of our countries blind, we had to invent some pretty nifty stuff. That paper therefore had the perfect qualities for my object of desire.

  • @endrek81
    @endrek81 Před 2 lety

    That box and the maze he built or at least a replica

  • @mycosys
    @mycosys Před 2 lety

    For your edification and pleasure, and in honour of your pronunciation of Leicester, i recommend you look up the song 'Shibboleth' by Sir Reginald Pikedevant esq. I believe you would enjoy it

  • @DecanFrost
    @DecanFrost Před 2 lety +1

    as a semi famous person on social media, i can tell you that youre reading the wrong comments Adam.

  • @DeGuerre
    @DeGuerre Před 2 lety

    It's nice to think that Leonardo (I think we're all on first name terms here) would be excited to show you what he was working on, but I don't think that's true in many cases. At least some of what he did was highly secret, sometimes for good reasons (e.g. some of his war machines) and sometimes for now-silly reasons (e.g. the legal prohibitions that prevented him from doing investigations into human anatomy).
    This may be why he used mirror writing, although that's not the only explanation. Leonardo was almost certainly left handed, and writing in mirror image just to avoid smudging the ink seems like a very Leonardo thing to do.

  • @stangiles2001
    @stangiles2001 Před 2 lety

    Leo's book was new at his time.

  • @jelkooklej
    @jelkooklej Před 2 lety +2

    Will you make any more videos on the arriflex?

  • @dreamcat4
    @dreamcat4 Před 2 lety +1

    so if da-vinci was an OG nerd, there any specific evidence of nerisms in his notebooks there, which we can relate to current day / every day nerdisms in the 21st century? also what other famous replicas of other people's notebooks exist? From other parts of history / other fields? To get an insight into those times. I suppose there is that Royal Society stuff presented by Tom Brady on objectivity. However seems like such a wealth of many different archival pieces that we cannot possibly buy a singe piece to get a complete picture, even if there were some replicas made? I suppose most famous are the works of Darwin and Newton comes to mind... although those were actually officially published and well known books in their day. Rather than something a bit more obscure and intimate such as a journal or a notebook. Maybe the notebooks of explorers and botanists? Like Cooke on his voyages? (or maybe the expeditions to the north or south poles, but i forgot their names now).

  • @plantman5126
    @plantman5126 Před 2 lety +1

    Fun fact: some hikers use Tyvek as a moisture barrier.

  • @lawrenceharris7717
    @lawrenceharris7717 Před 2 lety

    Ahhh. Now I want canned peaches and ice cream.

  • @capuchinseven
    @capuchinseven Před 2 lety +4

    Ha came to comment on the pronunciation of Leicester in a 10 min old video and a load of people also from Leicester commented already, small world.

  • @frederickgerber5491
    @frederickgerber5491 Před 2 lety

    Purchase Renaissance wax. It can be used on paper to stone. Developed by a museum to preserve their artifacts.

  • @mulreay
    @mulreay Před 2 lety +2

    Actually you wouldn't and never should use 'white gloves' to handle books, if you are wearing gloves you are more likely to tear the pages as you lose tactile response. Most books are treated to prevent issues with chemicals but the oils from your hands are not actually that harmful. There was an interesting video from Brady Haran at the Royal Society where the head librarian mentions that.

  • @matttaylor4003
    @matttaylor4003 Před 2 lety

    i wish had the money when they offered that type of peproduction of the Book of Kells they offered in the 90s so I see the book on person like he has with those books.

  • @theoosullivan1635
    @theoosullivan1635 Před 2 lety

    big up lestah

  • @1kbs11
    @1kbs11 Před 2 lety

    Very cool indeed. (JF)

  • @ArsenicDrone
    @ArsenicDrone Před 2 lety

    I wonder if a parchment Constitution and Declaration of Independence in envelopes merit being in this collection. Those things are pretty cool objects, for costing $3.95 or whatever in a museum gift shop.

  • @synisterfish
    @synisterfish Před 2 lety

    Another beautiful and stunning work...
    (The correct pronunciation would be as: "Lester").

  • @josephdoyle2780
    @josephdoyle2780 Před 2 lety

    I wonder if you could get a replica of the Voynich Mianuscript. Not as historically important, but certainly a convo piece! Thanks for sharing.

  • @Zonker66
    @Zonker66 Před 2 lety

    How could he not have been the original obsessive nerd?

  • @blackdogapiaryandfarm5885

    Loved the canned peaches reference. So true.

  • @peter4210
    @peter4210 Před 2 lety

    is it true that the book is in mirror writing. This is one of the major evidence that support Leonardo being dyslexic. I share the same "gift" of naturally writing mirrored. it toke me until 3rd grade to understand why my teacher keap making me practice writing. Until then, my mirror writing and my teachers writing were exactly the same in my brain.

  • @willseay8553
    @willseay8553 Před 2 lety

    This is a beautiful artifact but I can't help but note that Leonardo's narrative text is in Italian. An awful lot of value derived from the codex should be derived from the text. I would like to see someone come up with a pseudo artifact with the text translated into English for those of us not fluent in Italian. You could do the backwards writing and include the water stains, etc. to make it look legit.

  • @chriscmoor
    @chriscmoor Před 2 lety

    Remember Kids the Only Difference Between Screwing Around and Science Is Writing It Down

  • @adobbs92117
    @adobbs92117 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome Adam ! Does it come with a translation?

    • @Bulldog1878
      @Bulldog1878 Před 2 lety

      Yes, I can give you the translation mate. It's pronounced LESTER.

  • @A0111.
    @A0111. Před 2 lety

    Plot twist - it's a genuine artefact, Adam just doesn't know it.

  • @kevin7206
    @kevin7206 Před 2 lety +2

    Its not important to handle it with clean hands because you're trying to extend the life of the object, but important because to prevent adding new marks to something that was replicated down to the mark of the original work. If you add a finger smuge, did you add it or was it in the original?

  • @Hster68
    @Hster68 Před 2 lety +1

    As they said it's LESSTER.....