Posted by SillyOldDuffer on 01/10/2020 10:14:42:
The only thing I don't like about the programme is they often skip over important details. The camera lingers on stuff I know or could guess, and skims over the tricky bits. Had a look at the book that goes with the series: not recommended as a DIY guide for the technically minded!
Just how many times can you watch someone sawing a bit off, wrestling with a buried screw or pressing a new piece into some glue? After all, filing a piece to a finish is boring to do, watching somebody else do it is excruciatingly so. Any TV series that regularly showed that wouldn't be on for long.
This is true of all craft videos, the best ones know when to edit stuff out; time spent on the setup, start of machining/sewing/painting/whatever so you get an idea of what it should look like, a good shot of each completed step and the finished part all with an intelligent voiceover is far more watchable than 20 minutes in real time of a lathe making a big rod smaller.
Repair Shop is about the items, owners and their stories, charismatic experts with the more visual parts of the work added for interest. That well-judged combination is what makes it a pleasure to watch for lots of different interests.