Paris 1900 in color, Exposition Universelle [60fps, Remastered] w/sound design added

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  • čas přidán 11. 04. 2023
  • I colorized, restored and created a sound design for this video of Paris exposition universelle 1900, we can clearly see what is happening in broad daylight, moving platform installed on the boardwalk, Champs de Mars, Large crowd. Building. Base of the Eiffel Tower, the Palace of Electricity, view of the Place de l'Concorde
    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 only for the ambiance
    ✔restoration:(stabilisation,denoise,cleand,deblur)
    Please, be aware that colorization colors are not real and fake, colorization was made only for the ambiance and do not represent real historical data.
    B&W Video Source: United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Library of Congress
    B&W Video Source: collections.ushmm.org/search/...
    B&W Video Source: collections.ushmm.org/search/...
    B&W Video Source: collections.ushmm.org/search/...
    B&W Video Source: collections.ushmm.org/search/...
    Join this channel to benefit from exclusive advantages and also to support us: / @nass_0

Komentáře • 633

  • @NASS_0
    @NASS_0  Před rokem +112

    Please Like And Share

    • @gerardosofovich9197
      @gerardosofovich9197 Před rokem +4

      Please Buenos Aires 1900s

    • @DiscoverHudsonValley
      @DiscoverHudsonValley Před rokem +3

      I already shared with a few people who I know will love it!

    • @jaminova_1969
      @jaminova_1969 Před rokem +2

      Monsieur Nass! Greetings from Southern California! I am a huge fan of your work and it's evolution. If it is not too much of an imposition' Would you tell us a little about yourself and your process or technology?
      Hugs and applause,
      signed, Ms. Jami 🥰

    • @IvanTtofimov
      @IvanTtofimov Před rokem

      А кто работает? Столько бездельников

    • @yudhirgautam1645
      @yudhirgautam1645 Před rokem

      Are these remnants of tartarian buildings?? So beautiful. Elites dont want us to know our actual history. Sad

  • @dianasoto9803
    @dianasoto9803 Před rokem +89

    Love the gentleman @ 3:05 taking his hat off and smiling at the camera!

    • @MonkeyspankO
      @MonkeyspankO Před rokem +14

      He achieved a certain kind of immortality. Its funny, he must have known about the camara and planned the move. Kind of like folks with a google car today. While everyone else pretty much had no idea it was there or chose to ignore it.

    • @loui30
      @loui30 Před rokem +6

      He lives on...😢

    • @jacquelineiona1996
      @jacquelineiona1996 Před rokem +1

      Me too Diana!!!

    • @axelshawAk
      @axelshawAk Před 29 dny +2

      so much magic. what a time to be alive.

    • @De_mitaSiburian-uw7xs
      @De_mitaSiburian-uw7xs Před 25 dny

      3:22

  • @vltclz
    @vltclz Před 9 měsíci +29

    Today in 2023 Maria Branyas Morera is the oldest person on Earth. She was born on March 1907. That means every human we see in that video is long gone... But at the same time, somewhere on an island in the Indian Ocean, Jonathan the Tortoise (the current oldest land animal on Earth) was already 70 years old. I always find that crazy to put in perspective

  • @rpgmwf
    @rpgmwf Před rokem +64

    The first section shows the moving pavement ("trottoir roulant") that was an attraction at the Exposition Universelle that year, it ran along the Seine on Quai d'Orsay to the Eiffel Tower, you can see the sign: "Quai d'Orsay - Pont des Invalides" (which is where I live in Paris today). The second section after 3:50 pans around Place de la Concorde, and stops on the big arch which was the entrance to the world fair. The third section, after 5:50, shows visitors milling about at Trocadéro and on the bridge crossing the Seine to the Eiffel Tower and Champ de Mars with its pavilions.

    • @BackSeatHump
      @BackSeatHump Před rokem +1

      Yes, and I live at the top of La Tour Eiffel. You can just see my elbows where the camera pans up.

    • @drac124
      @drac124 Před rokem

      Why they go on and off that thing all the time? The same person goes down, walk a little then go on again, then off walk a bit, then on. Whats up with that?

    • @300books
      @300books Před rokem +5

      @@drac124 : They could see that they were being filmed and it was all new and exciting for them. It's kind of like when you see people today waving at a news camera because they know they'll be on TV.

    • @Roched0
      @Roched0 Před měsícem +1

      @@drac124 It was just something really new .. for us it looks normal.

    • @rubyrayrecords
      @rubyrayrecords Před 28 dny +1

      It would be new to us if we got it back.

  • @mrsleakyshit
    @mrsleakyshit Před rokem +46

    3:03
    This guy really stood out

  • @MichelleVisageOnlyFans
    @MichelleVisageOnlyFans Před rokem +60

    Those must've been exciting times. Bear in mind the first electric lamps were installed in Paris in 1878. The entire city including majority of households weren't fully electrified until around 1925. So the year of 1900 is an exciting era of advancing electrification and the people we see in this footage were witness to first adoption of this exciting new invention into their daily lives. The proof that electricity was still a novelty thing is The Palace of Electricity that was a major highlight of the Expo of 1900, with its 5,000 multi-coloured incandescent lights that illuminated the night and Edmond Paulin's ornately decorated water fountain at the Chateau d'Eau, situated directly in front of it.

    • @GazerBeam420
      @GazerBeam420 Před měsícem +2

      The first world expo in Paris was 1878, so there are questions surrounding whether or not a *different* type of method of electricity harnessing existed.

    • @espoirbleu9933
      @espoirbleu9933 Před měsícem

      L'électricité était présente et gratuite grâce à l'énergie éthérique
      Les gens que vous voyez dans la vidéo n'ont rien à voir avec la civilisation dans laquelle ils se trouvent.
      La preuve, les chevaux qui laissent leurs excréments. Imaginez l'odeur😂
      Il y a quelque chose d'étrange et c'est clair.

    • @espoirbleu9933
      @espoirbleu9933 Před měsícem

      ​@@GazerBeam420 l'énergie éthérique

    • @GazerBeam420
      @GazerBeam420 Před měsícem

      @@espoirbleu9933 oui oui, ordre mondial antique > nouvel ordre mondial

    • @rubyrayrecords
      @rubyrayrecords Před měsícem +1

      It is difficult to understand how the earliest displays of the new technology could be so grand. How could the supporting infrastructure have been rolled out at such speed? Generators? Distribution? Mass-produced parts? Qualified electricians? With experience? All this and more, before you consider any one implementation project of any scale (and safety).
      Then we do consider the scale of the first projects: acres of land, gigantic buildings, intricate ornamentation, fountains... Millions of customers (insured?) and hard deadlines. The world's press. Dignitaries. The efficiency of the testing phase alone must have been incredible.
      Before Test, the Design-and-Build phases would have been difficult to delineate, while on the cutting edge of technology. Each team would learn from validating assumptions, and would need to share their learns back to the other teams, via the organization. Consider bug number 0369: "Given x conditions when you attempt y then you get the outcome z. And the whole circuit blows out and that's how Jean-Claude got fried and that's why our team is behind by a week."
      But modern Project Management methodologies weren't developed for another 50 years (and are still flawed 70 years thence, especially in cutting-edge scenarios where we can't estimate a job before we try it). To manage innovation, the West has slowly, reluctantly been adopting "Lean", "Agile" and "Product" methodologies for this reason, yet more recently still.
      Apparently, in the late 19th Century the prevailing Project Management methodology (if we can call it that) was the idea of "the Great Man". Appoint the right man as the boss, and he'll get it done.
      In the context of the factories and the mines, we can see the evidence that they did get it done. We can not see evidence that they focused on deadlines as we do. We can not see evidence that they focused on targets as we do. We can see evidence of safety standards that don't compare to safety standards today. Pre-unionization, the factories and the mines were managed cruelly and inefficiently. They didn't know how to use the technology safely, they didn't have commercial incentive to invest in safety as an objective, and these "great men" were prepared to pay the human cost.
      Could the Great Men of the Worlds Fairs afford to take that approach? How many deadlines could they afford to miss? How many casualties could they afford? Ad-hoc, they could pay the newspapers to turn a blind eye. But overall, the entire program needed to succeed, on time.
      That's the electricians' story. Of course, we're told that they were working on the same site on the same projects as the construction workers and the plumbers and the carpenters and the decorators and the landscapers and the gardeners...
      "Hats off" to them all regardless: the proof is in the deliverables. The fairs were presented - and electrified - brilliantly. The photos and the films give us a performance of a mighty composition that otherwise we could not have imagined. Just like great classical music: for me, they have the same, intense, emotional flavor. Too grand-but-sad for words.
      Today, there are many questions about the infrastructure of the fairs. How much was in place? What was the scope of the projects? Construction vs restoration? Innovation vs back-engineering? Wiring vs repairing? Pondering these questions, while watching these clowns on the sidewalk, it's a curious story at least.

  • @richmeyer2064
    @richmeyer2064 Před rokem +58

    Due to it's age, this was difficult film to work with. The care in the added audio greatly enhanced the presentation. Thanks NASS.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +9

      thank you so much

    • @retropaganda8442
      @retropaganda8442 Před rokem

      If you pardon me being picky, we can clearly hear the ambient voices are contemporary American English.

    • @tooleyheadbang4239
      @tooleyheadbang4239 Před rokem +1

      @@retropaganda8442 Plenty of American visitors attended the Exposition.

    • @richmeyer2064
      @richmeyer2064 Před rokem

      @@retropaganda8442 okay picky, your hearing is better than mine! 😊

    • @Rick-Nundigger
      @Rick-Nundigger Před rokem +3

      🎨... Un écrivain à décrit la fameuse Nolstagie du temps passé....
      Ce n'est pas le...."Ce fût bien mieux Avant"..
      ...En fait C'est le complexe de l'Âge d'Or...😊🎬

  • @kennethnero2011
    @kennethnero2011 Před rokem +143

    The thing I love so much about these Vintage Flicks are just the fashion, Clothes, Respectfulness and Calmness of everything… I’d do everything to go back and to be to live in this era.. because people were just so different in a good way

    • @DiscoverHudsonValley
      @DiscoverHudsonValley Před rokem +14

      Agreed!

    • @that70sdude
      @that70sdude Před rokem +42

      I absolutely agree. I miss so many virtues of that days. As you say, it seems to be such a good time to be alive, with no smartphones, the ongoing stress etc. But let's not forget about the circumstances behind these pictures. Ill people often died, kids were forced to work and maybe couldn't find time to go to school, poor people were starving and some even froze to death. Every medal always has two sides.

    • @DiscoverHudsonValley
      @DiscoverHudsonValley Před rokem +8

      @@that70sdude All excellent points sir!

    • @jack_knife-1478
      @jack_knife-1478 Před rokem +16

      The way women dress is just so elegant!

    • @avelvetcreation3556
      @avelvetcreation3556 Před rokem +5

      So true !

  • @nnaheim.
    @nnaheim. Před rokem +24

    Damn we fucked up didnt we?

  • @valeriehartman3705
    @valeriehartman3705 Před rokem +36

    I am French and my grandparents were born in 1900. Thank you for putting these hours of work together.

    • @phon8491
      @phon8491 Před 6 měsíci +2

      france is now frenchstan and the main language is arab and african

    • @dido5178
      @dido5178 Před 6 měsíci

      @@phon8491 exactly

    • @Yves95128
      @Yves95128 Před měsícem

      @@phon8491 Actually, African is not a language...

  • @joeycentofanti1987
    @joeycentofanti1987 Před rokem +11

    None of these people could have imagined someone would be watching them in 2023

  • @that70sdude
    @that70sdude Před rokem +34

    Wow. This looks so alive, but everyone seen on these pictures is already gone for quite a long time. It was a different world back then, and I guess nobody there would believe that two of the biggest wars in human existence would happen pretty shortly. To see these kids that might have died during these wars, maybe even as soldiers, to see this beautiful city that's going to be destroyed is so, so sad. But thanks to the cameraman and you, we can get a glimpse of how beautiful this city was and how happy these kids were. Thank you for bringing us these remastered videos!

    • @retropaganda8442
      @retropaganda8442 Před rokem +3

      Heh, fortunately Paris wasn't destroyed. Its architecture today is the same as in this old film.

    • @FirstHandLLC
      @FirstHandLLC Před rokem

      Paris wasn't destroyed. France has decided not to fight and just wait till the rest of the world sacrifices their lives to save them from Nazis. A cowardly shameful act!

    • @Asenay22
      @Asenay22 Před rokem +7

      WHAT? Paris has never been destroyed! it is the miraculous and totally intact city of the 2 world wars. It is precisely because it was never destroyed that the city is so beautiful today.

    • @sapereaude5476
      @sapereaude5476 Před rokem +3

      Париж к счастью не пострадал от Мировых войн, зато пострадал в 1960-е от варваров застройщиков

    • @AAlee507
      @AAlee507 Před rokem

      Pensei o mesmo que você

  • @canadagood
    @canadagood Před rokem +15

    I own an original copy 'Paris Exposition 1900' guidebook published by Hachette & Cie. It really was a special time and place. For a short time the period seemed at pease. Rodin had a special exhibit that summer and the sporting events included base-ball, Concours Hippique (including jumping, carriage riding and Polo); Vélocipédie (cycling); Automobilisme (racing in at least six classes) and Sport Nautique (rowing, sailing and motor boat racing). There was just so much to see!

    • @rubyrayrecords
      @rubyrayrecords Před 28 dny

      Yes, the whole culture looks as though it’s built on peace. t’s very difficult to imagine people at war achieving anything like it.

  • @Moscow4K
    @Moscow4K Před 11 měsíci +34

    Это потрясающее видео. Показывает, между прочим, как мы сильно деградировали с тех пор. Во всех отношениях. Автору спасибо!

    • @Renji.gotei13
      @Renji.gotei13 Před 7 měsíci +2

      Это так.

    • @joan22
      @joan22 Před 6 měsíci +3

      True!

    • @christianterraes8334
      @christianterraes8334 Před 5 měsíci +4

      Surtout en France

    • @Moscow4K
      @Moscow4K Před 5 měsíci +2

      @@christianterraes8334 великая Франция и великая Россия пробили дно примерно на одну глубину. Но потенциал велик - мы обязательно снова вырастем!

  • @maximusextreme3725
    @maximusextreme3725 Před rokem +31

    Many of the children in this video probably went on to fight in WW1 14 years later 😳 Thanks for the video!

  • @airdailyx
    @airdailyx Před rokem +118

    this is just so incredibly amazing to watch! do you think these people are thinking that people 123 years in the future would be watching this on inconceivable technology while they take a crap??
    Paris had so many amazing unique things that they tore down. It’s really sad. Thanks for bringing it back to life!!

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +8

      thank you so much

    • @aaronv.3382
      @aaronv.3382 Před rokem +2

      😂 estoy en el baño!😂😂

    • @jack_knife-1478
      @jack_knife-1478 Před rokem +5

      I'm on toilet too😂

    • @waterhead1029
      @waterhead1029 Před rokem

      Crude humor…..Which is why I laughed. Good one.

    • @Asenay22
      @Asenay22 Před rokem +7

      Paris is the city with the least demolition in the world by far! Here on the video it seems to be a good idea to keep these buildings, but in reality the perspective was cut, and the Exposition was put on the only places of the center that breathed a little with space! Imagine the Eiffel tower surrounded by compact buildings everywhere at its feet... or the invalid invisibilized behind other buildings, or even the quay of the Seine not practicable without being able to make a walk because bordered of other buildings! That's why everything was ephemeral.

  • @FULRAIBOU
    @FULRAIBOU Před rokem +13

    123年前でも、技術が高いんだなあと感心しますね。建物、乗り物、施設 2023年の現在で観ても、全く稚拙さがなく洗練されている。素晴らしい!そしてここに写っている方は、この世には誰ひとりいないという不思議。

  • @Stand_By_For_Mind_Control

    Folks who are my age in this video were probably living through the Paris Commune of 1871. Just like how I was a teenager in the 90s. It's amazing how much societal and technological progress they saw in their lives.

  • @davidwilcox8786
    @davidwilcox8786 Před rokem +8

    that one guy knew what the film maker was doing and took full advantage of it.his image will live on forever.notice the lack of obesity in people of the past.what a great time

  • @vercingetorixliberte2102
    @vercingetorixliberte2102 Před rokem +18

    Paris de l'élégance. la tour eiffel cette grande dame. Qui a traversé le temps et toujours aussi belle pas une ride c'était Paris . magnifique. 👍🇫🇷

  • @WAL_DC-6B
    @WAL_DC-6B Před rokem +75

    Amazing that a moving sidewalk as seen here existed at this time. I gather it made a circular pattern unless it backed up at some point. Also, interesting to see the way people were "duded up" back then. Women in their pretty long dresses with ornate hats and men mostly in suits with many wearing straw hats. Nice trip back in time and thanks for sharing! Now, where's Gigi?!!

    • @WAL_DC-6B
      @WAL_DC-6B Před rokem +5

      @@dainadaino678 Yeah, especially on a hot summer day.

    • @canadagood
      @canadagood Před rokem +9

      The 1893 Chicago World's Fair had a Moving Sidewalk and by 1900 EVERY world's exposition had to have one!

    • @laurielaurie8280
      @laurielaurie8280 Před rokem +1

      I don't think it was a moving sidewalk

    • @waterhead1029
      @waterhead1029 Před rokem +13

      Not a T shirt or a pair of Crocs in sight.

    • @WAL_DC-6B
      @WAL_DC-6B Před rokem +5

      @@laurielaurie8280 You're right. It was a "moving platform" according to the description of this video.

  • @manbtm1
    @manbtm1 Před rokem +11

    Obviously from a moving sidewalk that’s pretty cool I didn’t know they even had that back then, we could use more of those today in certain places!

  • @LBVeil4215
    @LBVeil4215 Před rokem +9

    Amazing to see the smiling faces and curious expressions of the people looking directly at the camera. It would be interesting to see images of the camera, operators and gear. The people appear to have been fascinated by it all.

    • @auggie803
      @auggie803 Před rokem +2

      -I think it would look like a large black box on a tripod with a tube & glass lens in the end part of the tube. Glad people were taking pictures like this back then or we would never know what it all looked like.

  • @gabrielgonzales5907
    @gabrielgonzales5907 Před rokem +33

    Excellent work! I love how your videos take us back in time like this!

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +1

      thank you so much

  • @DzasterNL
    @DzasterNL Před rokem +43

    They all look so behaved and classy...
    What have we done....

    • @travisadams4470
      @travisadams4470 Před rokem +33

      Progressive liberals, inclusive-diversity. That is what ruined everything.

    • @Vanchinchelo
      @Vanchinchelo Před rokem +1

      evolution
      when you ask why everytime you will find some horrible true

    • @appleforever6664
      @appleforever6664 Před rokem +8

      WOKE did it!

    • @auggie803
      @auggie803 Před rokem

      @@travisadams4470 -Yep. Liberals came along and ruined everything. It could have been a really great world if it were not for them.

    • @sapereaude5476
      @sapereaude5476 Před rokem +4

      ​@@travisadams4470 при чём тут либералы?
      В крушении Прекрасной эпохи виновен Вильгельм ll. А в гибели искусства - модернизм (не путать с модерном (ар-нуво))

  • @HB73.
    @HB73. Před rokem +11

    Bluffant, incroyable, je suis impressionné par la qualité des images. Une vraie machine à remonter le temps. Puissant.

    • @HB73.
      @HB73. Před rokem +6

      Et j'ajoute que c'est émouvant de voir ces gens qui pour une partie non négligeable iront se faire massacrer dans les tranchées quelques années plus tard.. Et si on pouvait modifier les événements.. Ce sont des vidéos qui font cogiter sévère.

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +2

      Un grand merci !

    • @DexterSkelter
      @DexterSkelter Před rokem

      ​@@HB73. j'ai pensé cela aussi...

  • @petebeatminister
    @petebeatminister Před rokem +10

    A film from 1900... wow, thats really old. And really impressive what they build for the world fair, even today. Back then, the people must have been just blown away by all those wonders, like the moving sidewalk.

    • @petebeatminister
      @petebeatminister Před rokem

      @@user-kl3jm9xm2q Yes, I think it was Napoleon who discovered Paris, wasn't it? :)

    • @user-eb5cb6ud1p
      @user-eb5cb6ud1p Před 5 měsíci

      @@petebeatminister ??? I thought it was Paris Hilton who built the first hotel. 😃🤣

  • @BenStarner
    @BenStarner Před rokem +9

    Send me back there.

  • @gavinlew8273
    @gavinlew8273 Před 6 měsíci +5

    French architecture was truly magnificent in those times!

  • @chatmaigre
    @chatmaigre Před rokem +9

    le trottoir roulant baptisé « Rue de l’Avenir » : quelle magnifique idée ! Traduction: the moving sidewalk called “Rue de l’Avenir”: what a wonderful idea! 👍 merci pour le partage / Thank you for sharing

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +1

      merci beaucoup !

  • @37silverstreak1
    @37silverstreak1 Před rokem +4

    Excellent quality from such old footage, WELL DONE!!!!!!!

  • @pedromartinmuerto
    @pedromartinmuerto Před rokem +3

    This video is so nostalgic that even people in comments talk like they where from 1900

    • @gavinlew8273
      @gavinlew8273 Před 6 měsíci +1

      The most under-rated comment ever..

  • @jack_knife-1478
    @jack_knife-1478 Před rokem +6

    8:42 a beautiful woman smiled at me from 123 years ago just wonderful.

  • @DiscoverHudsonValley
    @DiscoverHudsonValley Před rokem +10

    This is incredible!! Excellent job on the restoration as always NASS.

  • @stupor_mundi
    @stupor_mundi Před rokem

    it's so magical to see this, what a precious film and you brought it back to life, thank you 💖

  • @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik
    @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik Před rokem +11

    The young boys in uniform were helping people get on and off the moving sidewalk. Actually nice to have with some elderly people or handicap people. Nice upload.

    • @dmtm1111
      @dmtm1111 Před 9 měsíci

      I hope the youth of the 1950’s and 1960’s provided the same assistance to those 1900 boys who would then, to the extent they survived, be elderly themselves.

    • @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik
      @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@dmtm1111 Very good comment my friend. I agree with you. 100%

  • @ChantalAttia
    @ChantalAttia Před rokem +4

    Waouh ! Bravo !! On s'y croirait. Quel beau travail ♥

  • @fdrstan
    @fdrstan Před rokem +14

    Man, this is absolutely incredible. Those moving platforms are a trip. Paris has always been beautiful. Thanks for these priceless uploads.

  • @enjolras76
    @enjolras76 Před rokem +1

    Extraordinary. Wow. THANK YOU for making this so accessible.

  • @Bishop228
    @Bishop228 Před rokem +9

    Amazing video. I sure wish unoriginal people would stop with the “everyone in this video is long dead” comments on these videos. Very tacky & regurgitated stuff in the comment section of nearly all videos this old.

    • @LUIS-ox1bv
      @LUIS-ox1bv Před 8 měsíci +2

      Totally agree. Its like saying water is wet and we breathe air. This comment, along with the cheap, maudlin attidudes, is conducive to hurling. Sentimentalism is but one of the very agents behind the destruction of the very city pictured here.

  • @LUIS-ox1bv
    @LUIS-ox1bv Před 8 měsíci +2

    Parisians, impeccably and appropriately dressed for the exposition. Beautiful.

  • @claudelamirand3728
    @claudelamirand3728 Před rokem +9

    Merci. C'est trés agréable d'observer cette époque d'un moment phare de Paris ou déambulent nos anciens dans la mode du temps. La curiosité augmente de la connaissance de l'histoire dans lequel s'inscrit cet évènement et c'est coquet aussi de chercher ce que ces gens ont en pensées des affaires du monde et de la France.

  • @teggy21
    @teggy21 Před rokem +5

    What a dream !
    If I have a time machine, it's definitely the place and the exact date where I will go!

  • @kirillyezhov3981
    @kirillyezhov3981 Před rokem +8

    The Identity of France

  • @newmankidman5763
    @newmankidman5763 Před rokem +4

    Wow, the Eiffel Tower, La Dame De Fer, had only been open for 11 years

  • @RR-lv3tp
    @RR-lv3tp Před rokem

    Love this channel 💯 i always get, an intense feeling of nostalgia watching them. I believe i was alive in this era, in another lifetime. Who knows

  • @jaminova_1969
    @jaminova_1969 Před rokem +3

    While not perfect, the distortion gives the illusion of looking through a looking glass into the past! I think the distortion is part of You Tubes copy protection, which wouldn't be needed since this film is most likely in the public domain. That said, this is truly amazing and gives us a totally different perspective on life and the people in the past. In B&W, the people and places looked old. In color, they look so normal!

  • @ttocselbag5054
    @ttocselbag5054 Před rokem +2

    I love your vids NASS. Always make me wistful for a time long ago. 😊❤️

  • @bobbysands6923
    @bobbysands6923 Před rokem +1

    Thanks again for your great and incredibly important work. It actually makes me cry,.

  • @wingberry123
    @wingberry123 Před rokem +4

    I was just in Paris last weekend. Looking forward to going back ❤

  • @olivierihs6323
    @olivierihs6323 Před 5 měsíci +3

    Merci de nous montrer ce film colorisé. On voit certaines personnes se mettrent en scène en relevant la tête ou en allant et venant. J'aime aussi la personne qui arrose la chaussée car à cette époque les chevaux soulevaient beaucoup de poussière.

  • @12TribesUnite
    @12TribesUnite Před 6 měsíci

    Great video! Super important to see... Thank you for this!

  • @ZapmaN93
    @ZapmaN93 Před rokem +4

    Look at those buildings. Wow

    • @justadudedudin
      @justadudedudin Před 7 měsíci +1

      And they built them on horse and buggy yeah right

    • @user-eb5cb6ud1p
      @user-eb5cb6ud1p Před 5 měsíci

      Paris has always been a city of great architecture!
      And conspiracy nutters to the contrary, we know how it was all done! Hogwarts grads had nothing to do with it 😅

  • @RUD-LION-KMarc-Tribute
    @RUD-LION-KMarc-Tribute Před rokem +6

    Magnifique les tapis roulant pour circuler 👍 quelle bonne idée 👍 nous avons rien inventé finalement superbe vidéo l’ami 👍

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +1

      Merci à vous 😊

  • @targetegrat
    @targetegrat Před rokem +2

    Closest thing to a tiime machine

  • @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik
    @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik Před rokem +3

    Nass, Another fabulous upload. I love this period. Love the moving sidewalk at the beginning. I remember I saw a special called "The Century" that came out about the year 2000 and they talked to really old people who remember the moving sidewalk and other things from a very long time ago. Even a lady who saw Queen Victoria of England when she was a little girl and this lady was still living in the year 2000 . LOVE the man at 3:03! LOL. Love the black strong prancing horse at 4:50 too pulling the coach with Ease! Thanks for the upload.

  • @marleenscholz4386
    @marleenscholz4386 Před rokem +3

    Its so beautiful beautiful beautiful. Like in a fairy tale ♥ Thank you Mr. Nass :-)

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +1

      thank you so much

  • @immaterialimmaterial5195

    Wow - wonderful to see/behold!

  • @GeorgeAbitbol33
    @GeorgeAbitbol33 Před rokem +1

    Génial, quel boulot !

  • @bagelispoulos8275
    @bagelispoulos8275 Před rokem +1

    great video THANK YOU !!

  • @robertoalamo6353
    @robertoalamo6353 Před rokem +2

    Fantastic video!! Best regards from Chile !

  • @albertdomenger6126
    @albertdomenger6126 Před rokem +3

    Incroyable de voir le tapis roulant, l'employé de la voirie arrosé la chaussée de la place de la Concorde et beau final de la Dame de Fer 👏🙏pour ce partage

  • @patriciathomas5097
    @patriciathomas5097 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Bizarre, je ne me suis pas vu dans les images... Étonnant ! Gerard.

  • @shmunkey9830
    @shmunkey9830 Před rokem +7

    I wish we could see more buildings... They are so much more than this video shows us...

    • @stephani1972
      @stephani1972 Před 9 měsíci

      Just google the word Tartaria & knock yourself out with the technology, the structures, the height of the people that were from there and obvious divine wisdom they had to pull it all off. Meanwhile, humans sucked up to every war mongerer and made sure most of all buildings were destroyed long ago erasing our real past.

    • @user-eb5cb6ud1p
      @user-eb5cb6ud1p Před 5 měsíci

      There are oceans of photos available both online and in libraries (remember them?). Paris has always been La Ville Merveilleuse!
      (and don't fall for the conspiracy BS. We know how ALL of it was built. Hogwarts wasn't involved 😄)

  •  Před rokem

    Thanks for sharing!

  • @laurielaurie8280
    @laurielaurie8280 Před rokem +1

    Fun to see the old footage :)

  • @jerrymail
    @jerrymail Před rokem +4

    A time when even industrial buildings or subway architecture looked beautiful... Before the ugliness of our modern world.

  • @user-fc4hx2vv6r
    @user-fc4hx2vv6r Před rokem +15

    Какая красота
    Все костюмы одежда сшиты по фигурам Люди как достойно себя держат
    Ни одного цветного не увидел Одни белые французы
    Всего сто с небольшим лет и полный винегрет

    • @sapereaude5476
      @sapereaude5476 Před rokem +3

      Африканцы на выставке были в качестве экспонатов, а азиаты были редки среди остальных посетителей

    • @user-fc4hx2vv6r
      @user-fc4hx2vv6r Před rokem

      @@luckyluk2864 аааа я думал расисты это чëрные

    • @jamesaharon8653
      @jamesaharon8653 Před rokem

      Расист.

    • @user-fc4hx2vv6r
      @user-fc4hx2vv6r Před rokem

      @@jamesaharon8653 черномазый

  • @Patrick-ud3vu
    @Patrick-ud3vu Před rokem +5

    123 years ago isn’t really that long ago. And neither is 123 years from now.

    • @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik
      @SonnyCorleone-tg1ik Před rokem +3

      Patrick, I agree. My Grandmother was born in 1892 and would be 8 years old in 1900. And She was still alive when I was a kid in the 1970's.

    • @LUIS-ox1bv
      @LUIS-ox1bv Před 8 měsíci +1

      Correct. That is but over one lifetime ago. Not a long time at all, in the timeline of history.

  • @marie-joseannet5364
    @marie-joseannet5364 Před rokem +2

    Merci beaucoup....nostalgie....

  • @LaoKast21
    @LaoKast21 Před rokem +1

    Just think, everyone in this video has passed. The reality and certainties in life are humbling. Great video!

  • @MrThomasAnderson7892
    @MrThomasAnderson7892 Před rokem +6

    No skinny horses in the 1900s, lots of manure on the street and no smog. Wonderful.

    • @raysalter2270
      @raysalter2270 Před rokem +3

      the future was here in the 19th century this is our 15-minute City, no cars just horse sh*t.

    • @nicktamer4969
      @nicktamer4969 Před rokem +2

      All trains, boats, and power supply were made by steam at this time. There was much more smog than today.

    • @-oiiio-3993
      @-oiiio-3993 Před rokem +1

      There was, indeed, smog.
      From _Our World In Data_ :
      National air pollution trends often follow the environmental kuznets curve (EKC). The EKC provides a hypothesis of the link between environmental degradation and economic development...
      If we take a historical look at pollution levels in London, for example, we see this EKC clearly. In the graph, we have plotted the average levels of suspended particulate matter (SPM) in London’s air from 1700 to 2016. Suspended particulate matter (SPM) refers to fine solid or liquid particles which are suspended in Earth’s atmosphere (such as soot, smoke, dust and pollen). Exposure to SPM - especially very small particles, which can more easily infiltrate the respiratory system - has been strongly linked to negative cardiorespiratory health impacts, and even premature death. As we see, from 1700 on, London experienced a worsening of air pollution decade after decade. Over the course of two centuries the suspended particulate matter in London’s air doubled. But at the very end of the 19th century the concentration reached a peak and then began a steep decline so that today’s levels are almost 40-times lower than at that peak.
      The data presented has been kindly provided by Roger Fouquet, who has studied the topic of environmental quality, energy costs and economic development in great detail.
      From Earth Org regarding Paris:
      A host of literature describing the horrible conditions of blackened air and cities appears in the second half of the 19th century, as its noise and pollution became impossible to ignore. It wasn’t until 1898 that a law banning “Heavy and extended black smoke emissions” was passed. However, these issues became an administrative problem rather than a legal one, meaning that surveys were led by hand-picked “experts” and rules were easily circumvented.
      Around the year 1900, Parisians knew they had a serious pollution problem. No, not smog and particulate matter, they said, but the dung from over 80,000 horses carrying people and loads around the city everyday. Officials decided to test moving horse-drawn vehicles to the verge of the Champs-Elysees causeway, while motorized vehicles would be given the center. The contrast between the manure-laden and rubber-smoothed aisles left people convinced (translated from a French article in the “Figaro”): “It is easy to see that, from a hygienic standpoint, automobiles whose exhaust is rapidly absorbed by the air, are preferable to equestrian carriages.”
      Massive industrialization throughout the century led to many new forms of pollution, and despite some rudimentary measurements of CO2’s distribution through Paris, not much action was taken.
      Interestingly, the tool for measuring smoke quality was a set of 5 pieces of paper, shaded gradually from white to black. Smoke color was compared to that of the papers and thus recorded.

  • @jessebaldwin2661
    @jessebaldwin2661 Před rokem +6

    Wearing hats was a big deal back in those days. Every man, woman, and child wore a hat back then.

  • @patman5659
    @patman5659 Před rokem +5

    What insane architecture is there at that time? And why dissapeared a lot of these incredible looking buildings? Amazing to see!

    • @yudhirgautam1645
      @yudhirgautam1645 Před rokem

      They destroyed it. Elites dont want us to know our history..

    • @CognacLXVIII
      @CognacLXVIII Před 10 měsíci +2

      Satanist destroyed them

    • @patman5659
      @patman5659 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@CognacLXVIII I agree. If you intend to destroy beauty like this, you must be obsessed by powers, which I would call "satanic" too. When I look at these buildings, I can fell the harmony they're giving me. It's just so beautiful and I can feel, vibing with them. Of course it would be in Satans need, to get rid of these kind of interconnections for humans.

    • @justadudedudin
      @justadudedudin Před 7 měsíci +1

      @@patman5659these people did not build those with horse and buggy. They were already here from a previous civilization in my opinion

    • @patman5659
      @patman5659 Před 7 měsíci

      @@justadudedudin I totally agree.

  • @pmafterdark
    @pmafterdark Před rokem +4

    Pretty amazing to think we're able to see these people long gone just enjoying their lives from 123 years past.

    • @steviechampagne
      @steviechampagne Před rokem +3

      pretty amazing to think at how far we’ve been subverted in 120 years

    • @pmafterdark
      @pmafterdark Před rokem +1

      @@steviechampagne No argument from me.

  • @notsoseriousmoonlight
    @notsoseriousmoonlight Před rokem +3

    It does the heart good to know that 19th century folks, recently arrived in the 20th, could have mastered escalators with ease, had they existed. 😊❤

  • @shaunwest3612
    @shaunwest3612 Před rokem +1

    Great video nass, amazing work, incredible footage of Paris,the moving travelater was pretty inovotive for 1900,i was lovely people's reactions to it👌😀👍

  • @geraldskinner63
    @geraldskinner63 Před rokem +2

    Absolutely brilliant! Was it just me or did the smiling guy with the black derby make more than one appearance in different places?

  • @mrdilligaf0001
    @mrdilligaf0001 Před rokem +2

    It’s like looking through a time viewing devise. But kind of sad as you know not one of these people are still alive.

    • @raufpenguin1074
      @raufpenguin1074 Před rokem

      Yeah i was telling myself this. Not even the little kid in the video is still alive. Life is just crazy!

    • @gavinlew8273
      @gavinlew8273 Před 6 měsíci

      Yea, it's like peeking into a different dimension in another universe!

  • @wethepeople7961
    @wethepeople7961 Před rokem +1

    Wow Amazing Video

  • @DexterSkelter
    @DexterSkelter Před rokem

    Amazing.
    Thanks.

  • @HugoBrown
    @HugoBrown Před rokem +2

    Hw cool is this love it :-) the first travelators I mean now days you only see them in Airport and to think Paris already had them in 1900 on the footpath , another great video for us to watch and wonder about the people and what they got up to

  • @libertycan6959
    @libertycan6959 Před rokem +2

    Beautiful

  • @asan1050
    @asan1050 Před rokem +3

    Thanks Much ! NASS

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem +1

      thank you very much my friend

  • @Mr.Glenn.
    @Mr.Glenn. Před rokem +2

    Nice Video 👍 Thanks NASS

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem

      thank you so much my friend

  • @hopps3206
    @hopps3206 Před měsícem

    Somewhere here, my great-great grandfather is walking around enjoying the sights. I still possess a cup of his that has the Paris skyline etched into the glass with his initials. An extremely rare piece that is on display on a museum in Gympie, Queensland.

  • @thegulibert
    @thegulibert Před rokem

    Travail in time…. Thank you!

  • @TheLEGOproject
    @TheLEGOproject Před rokem

    superbe travail ,bravo.

  • @braders790boop
    @braders790boop Před rokem +3

    this looks like an alternate reality. reminds me of columbia from bioshock infinite. makes me think what the world could be like if we didnt have the world wars,

  • @quiksgroove1483
    @quiksgroove1483 Před 11 měsíci

    This is beautiful

  • @alaarashed9298
    @alaarashed9298 Před rokem

    ❤nice very good work

  • @kaycox19
    @kaycox19 Před rokem +1

    Amazing

  • @ingosippel9653
    @ingosippel9653 Před rokem +1

    Fantastic 👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻👍🏻

  • @Hugging_Cactus
    @Hugging_Cactus Před rokem +2

    these films are amazing. 😮❤

  • @Benjamin98225
    @Benjamin98225 Před rokem +4

    J’aurais tellement voulu y être lors de l’exposition

  • @machineethics
    @machineethics Před rokem +1

    Thanks!

    • @NASS_0
      @NASS_0  Před rokem

      Thank you very much for your support, it means a lot to us, God bless you

  • @Phelia_Estrogen
    @Phelia_Estrogen Před rokem +2

    Ils ont l'air amusant c'est trotoire roulant !
    Anecdote le trottoir roulant à était créé en 1893 ,, l'un avancé à 4 km/h et le second a 8 km/h

  • @JoeLikesTrains
    @JoeLikesTrains Před 8 měsíci

    5:51 Palais du Trocadero! My absolute favorite building out of all the buildings during this Expo. Albeit being built decades earlier Of course, Ive only ever seen Photographs of it, seeing footage of it even just for a few seconds, stunning! 8:04

  • @davidpaul6615
    @davidpaul6615 Před rokem

    Excellent vid - thx. Gentlemen !!

  • @ProgettoErebus
    @ProgettoErebus Před 6 měsíci

    compliments.