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S2024 E10 Episode 10
本集简介

The team repair a dictaphone which contains a recording unheard for 80 years, whilst a barber set and Hungarian fruit bowl are also on the jobs list. 

Arriving first is Sebastian from Edinburgh, who brought with him an item that once belonged to his godfather in the 1930s. The tabletop dictaphone is a remarkable piece of equipment that allowed Sebastian's godfather, author William Gerhardie, to dictate his writing to a secretary, who would type the words for print. Gerhardie, born in Russia in 1895, was a contemporary of writers including HG Wells and Graham Greene, and wrote several books inspired by his early life in Russia. 

The dictaphone worked by amplifying the speaker's voice, which in turn was translated through a needle onto wax cylinders. The grooves in these cylinders could then be played back to hear the voice on the recording. Sebastian still has a number of wax cylinders, along with his godfather's dictaphone. If audio expert Mark Stuckey can get it working, it will be the first time anybody has heard the contents of these recordings for over 80 years. 

Soft toy restorers Amanda Middleditch and Julie Tatchell have an appointment with mother and daughter Lesley and Nicola from Belfast. They have brought with them a fluffy feline full of special memories. Jess the stuffed cat belongs to Lesley's foster son Colin, who the family began offering respite care to in 2012. Twelve-year-old Colin has Pierre Robin sequence, a rare birth defect characterised by an underdeveloped jaw. It results in breathing difficulties, no speech and being unable to chew, meaning Colin is now PEG fed. 

Jess has accompanied Colin through numerous hospital stays and operations, and is with him when he goes to sleep every night. But all that adoration has taken its toll on Jess, who is losing stuffing and has been patched up many times by Lesley. Colin is keen for Jess to retain the unique finger holes that mirror his own stomas, so Amanda and Julie hatch a plan to make Jess safe and secure without losing any of the important character that means so much to Colin and the whole family. 

The next visitor is Jannette from Northampton, who has a challenge for blade and scissor expert Jonathan Reid. In a bag, Jannette has her father Geoffrey's cut-throat razor and scissors - his tools as a traditional barber. After being called up for national service, Geoffrey was trained as the army's barber. After he left the army, he kept on with the job and eventually became the manager of a barber's shop, where Jannette also learned the trade. Jannette was just 14 when her father taught her how to use a cut-throat razor, the very one that she's brought to the barn today. When Jannette opened her own salon at the age of 19, her father was immensely proud of the achievement. 

Janette wants Jonathan to restore the barber set, now rusted and dulled by decades of disuse, back to the condition she remembers. As one of the last remaining scissor makers in the UK, Jonathan is exactly the right person to get these tools back to their best. 

Last into the barn are Christine and Sian from Newport in Wales. The sisters are hoping that ceramics expert Kirsten Ramsay can repair a broken fruit bowl that Christine brought with her late husband Itsvan (known as Steve) on their first visit together to his home country of Hungary in 1985. 

The couple met in a pub in 1975, 20 years after Itsvan had arrived in the UK aged just 16. He had fled his home country in the wake of the Hungarian uprising - a movement against Soviet brutality. After ten years together, Christine convinced Itsvan to return to Hungary for the first time since fleeing as a teenager so that he could visit his mother. During this trip, Christine spotted the ornate bowl, and Itsvan bought it for her. Itsvan sadly passed away in 2000 after being involved in a crash with a drunk driver. It was 15 years later when Christine's sister Sian accidentally broke the stand of the bowl whilst cleaning, so now the sisters are here in the hope that Kirsten can repair it.

上一集
2024/08/14 S2024 E9
Episode 9

The team repair an iconic toy that has given up the ghost. Elsewhere in the barn, there are restoration jobs on a dilapidated bench, which began life as a family bed, and a handmade guitar that links a son with his inspirational father. On Suzie Fletcher's list is the substantial repair of a taxi badge given to black cab drivers upon completing ‘The Knowledge' memory test of London's street routes. 

Arriving first are the Willis-Cox family from Northampton, who are hoping that woodworking maestro Will Kirk can repair the repurposed bench that began life as parents Andy and Madeleine's first bed 30 years ago. The bed held important memories for the couple as the place where they brought home premature son Ade and where their youngest daughter, Freya, was born! The creative couple couldn't let go of this sentimental item and so recycled it into a garden bench which has been much loved by the family but is now weather-worn and seriously unstable. 

Will's plan begins with dismantling the bench so he can assess which parts need to be replaced and remade, with the bench's legs needing extensive strengthening. So it's onto the lathe, where Will turns a whole set of new feet before turning his attention to the mortise and tenon joints that will keep the bench together for generations to come. 

Next to arrive are Andrew and Kirsty from Glasgow, who've brought with them a guitar that Andrew himself made at college inspired by his father, Del, the man who gave him a passion for both woodwork and music. But despite crafting a stunning guitar, Andrew made a crucial mistake, meaning the neck is attached crooked and unplayable. The repair is a tricky job which numerous restorers have already turned down, but luckily expert Julyan Wallis is made of sterner stuff! Julyan has the job of getting the guitar singing once again and wastes no time in coming up with a solution: a complete neck reset. But a job of this size and skill is a complex task. Julyan has to delicately remove the neck without damaging the body of the guitar, employing a jig for the careful procedure. With the guitar finally fixed, Andrew is excited to finally play the instrument he built in memory of his inspirational father. 

Horologist Steve Fletcher has an appointment with Gemma from Colwyn Bay, who is entrusting him with a very special sketchpad toy that her father Bill gave her when she was eight years old. The toy was given to Gemma when her parents divorced, and she would write secret messages to her beloved Dad using it, but now the limited-edition gold ‘Etch-a-Sketch' has stopped working entirely. Steve is in uncharted territory as he attempts to solve the mystery of how two small knobs magically create a drawing on the screen, and it all starts with the careful dismantling of the iconic toy. That's if he can figure out how to take it apart, of course. 

The barn's final guests are sisters Kelly and Dawn, who have a unique challenge for leather expert Suzie Fletcher. They've brought with them an official taxi badge that belonged to their father, John, a black cab driver for 38 years. The taxi badge was presented to black cab drivers once they passed the infamous ‘Knowledge' test of London's roads by memory alone. It's a proud reminder of the hard-working father that Kelly and Dawn remember as a dedicated cabbie. Suzie has the job of repairing the badge's cracked leather surface and reinforcing the stitching where the strap threatens to break away entirely. She enlists Brenton's help to revitalise the brass badge itself. Their teamwork means that Kelly and Dawn can proudly display their father's taxi badge once again.

下一集
2024/08/28 S2024 E11
Episode 11

First in the barn are mother and daughter Halina and Lesley with a treasure from World War II in desperate need of jeweller Richard Talman's expertise. The broken, silver ring belonged to Halina's mother, Janina, who was born in Warsaw, orphaned at just 13 years old and taken in by a convent close to the Jewish ghetto in the city. She was given the ring as a thank you from a Jewish woman after she risked her life passing food through the fence to families imprisoned in the ghetto. The ring, Janina's most treasured possession, stayed with her throughout her life, and was given to her daughter, Halina, when she passed away. Now broken, and severely worn, it's Halina's wish that the ring be turned into a pendant, so she can keep her mum, who displayed remarkable courage in the face of great adversity, close to her heart. 

Next to arrive is Gordon Craik with his sons, James and Ross. They've brought two intriguing pieces of sporting history for the attention of silversmith Brenton West. The pair of heavy, outdoor curling stones, complete with their wicker baskets, originally belonged to Gordon's grandfather and were famously used by Gordon's father in his team's victory of the Grand Match of 1979 – a huge outdoor curling match held on the Lake of Menteith near Stirling. Having sat outside for many years, the stones are worn, their handles bent, and the wicker baskets aren't fit to hold their weight. It's Gordon's dream to hand the stones that hold so much sporting and family history to his sons, both of whom are champion curlers in their own right. Brenton sets to work, bringing in the skills of leather expert Suzie Fletcher and basket weaver Sarah Hatton to get these stones back to their best. 

Next, woodworker Will Kirk is given the task of repairing a cherished character from childhood. Tracey Emery has brought in a wooden chef figurine that's sadly been fire-damaged in an unfortunate accident at home. The wooden chef used to sit on the counter of her grandparents' pub - it reminds Tracey of her beloved grandad, Ralph, and a happy childhood full of family Sunday lunches gathered at the pub. Tracey's dad, knowing how much the figurine meant to Tracey, was full of guilt after the accident and tried to have the wooden chef repaired, but it was the one thing he was unable to do before he sadly passed away. Will sets to work, to see if he can complete the task Tracey's dad so desperately wanted to finish, restoring the wooden chef's place in Tracey's kitchen and preserving memories of her beloved grandad and dad. 

Last in the barn today is Sonam Batra, hoping paper conservator Angelina Bakalarou can give a piece of cinematic and family history the red-carpet treatment. Sonam has brought a vintage film poster of Bollywood film Sholay. It's a reminder of the Sundays Sonam happily spent with his dad and cousins at the local cinema in Leamington Spa, and it's also where he learned to speak Hindi and Punjabi, simply by listening to Bollywood actors on the silver screen. Now torn and faded, Sonam discovered the poster whilst clearing out his dad's house after he passed away. Angelina sets out to restore the film poster's star quality, reviving Sonam's memories of his dad and the many happy hours spent with his family in days gone by.