Three for a Pound

From the collection of

Yorkshire Film Archive
The Yorkshire Film Archive at York St John University save and celebrate screen heritage made in or about Yorkshire. They connect broad and diverse audiences to their cultural and socially significant collection that reflects the life, landscape, and identity of the people of the region since the 1890s. Together with their sister archive in the North East they form the Yorkshire and North East Film Archive, a unique pan-regional resource with over 75,000 moving image artefacts. They unlock the collections for artists, academics, curators, programmers, researchers, and producers to reveal compelling stories from the vaults. www.yfanefa.com

Three for a Pound

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Doncaster's market and its place in the cultural life of the town.

The film focuses on the markets in Doncaster and the traders who sell there. It explores the difficulties nowadays surrounding the sector including competition and accessibility issues. However, the outlook of most is positive for its future and the survival of it due to the community and personability that the market offers opposed to the supermarkets.


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From the collection

How We Shopped

From the high street to the information superhighway: shopping undergoes a makeover.
The 1980s heralded a sea change in the way we shopped - and what we shopped for. Reflecting the growing impact of new technologies, from the arrival of credit cards to the consumer electronics boom and ultimately the internet shopping age, this collection also journeys through the changing face of our high streets into the 1990s and beyond. This is the era of out-of-town supermarkets and supersized shopping malls muscling in on the traditional town centre trade. Many smaller villages faced the loss of local shops entirely, but they didn't give up without a fight. Alongside these existential threats, local news reports investigate such emerging issues as convenience food labelling, shoplifting and the campaign to 'Buy British' as domestic manufacturing continued its long and painful decline. Glimpses of long-lost chain stores, brands and products that once dominated everyday life across the UK may inspire more than a whiff of nostalgia. Yet this collection also tells a story of continuity: despite the all-powerful internet, we do still seem to want to come together to shop in the 'real world', not least at Christmas, and those seasonal shopping moments are here waiting to be unwrapped

33 videos in this collection

1

Shopping

2

Shoplifting Is On The Increase

3

Dog: Dog Days

4

Post-Christmas Sales

5

Toy Fair 1980

6

Charm School

7

Round Robin: Think British

8

Debden Village Shop Re-opens

9

Anderson and McAuley Department Store

10

Credit Card Shopping in Northampton

11

Villagers Open Community Shop

12

St George's Market

13

Shopping Centre Santas

14

Yvonne Aston is the New Outsize Model

15

Chinese Supermarket in Nottingham

16

Big Night Out Shopping

17

E Numbers in Everyday Popular Products

18

Battle Goes On Over Sunday Trading

19

Counterfeit Goods

20

CD Video is the Future

Safely navigating the new virtual high street.
21

Shop Safely on the Net: Virtual Mail (BSL / subtitles)

22

Foam Furniture

23

One Day in the Corn Exchange

24

St Mary Street - 50 Years On

25

Manchester A to Z

26

High Streets

27

Supermarkets and City Living

28

Oh No... Not Another Manchester A-Z

29

The Fashionistas

30

Take That Ticket Frenzy

31

The Commercialisation of Easter

32

Easter Day Shopping

33

Three for a Pound

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