Jacob Collier is a rare musician: an expert in so many musical languages (western harmony, negative harmony, microtonalism) and a phenomenal communicator about music. He’s something like an Ambassador for Music, traveling the world and getting thousands of people, musicians and non-musicians alike, to sing in his audience choirs.
Live at On Air Fest, this conversation, catches Jacob between projects. Last year he released The Light for Days, a comparatively minimalist collection of songs written on his special five-string guitar, a quiet turn after the massive Djesse quadrilogy, which featured over 50 collaborators from Herbie Hancock to Anoushka Shankar and wove hundreds of thousands of audience choir voices into the recordings.
Given that Jacob is always improvising with the best collaborators, Charlie wanted one of his own own. Five minutes before the show, Charlie spotted Sam Sanders, co-host of Vibe Check and host of the Sam Sanders Show on KCRW, and asked him onstage. Sam’s a musician and one of the great interviewers, and he showed how improvising in conversation is just as essential as it is in music.
22 Mar 2026
The Silent Ilford Factory: How Britain’s Photography Empire Faded Away
In the heart of Ilford and Mobberley, there once stood the absolute global king of black-and-white photography—the legendary Ilford Photo factories where the magic of film and paper was manufactured, where the distinctive smell of fixer chemicals, the tactile ritual of loading 35mm film in darkness, and the almost supernatural moment of watching an image slowly appear on Ilford Multigrade paper under a red safelight defined serious photography for over a century. Ilford wasn’t merely a film company; it was the standard against which all black-and-white photography was measured, the place where British chemical engineering brilliance created materials so reliable and consistent that professional photographers worldwide trusted no other brand, where every darkroom enthusiast knew that Ilford meant quality, permanence, and the pure craft of analog photography that connected you directly to light and chemistry.
But the digital revolution destroyed that world almost overnight. As digital cameras eliminated the need for film and paper, as computer screens replaced darkrooms, Ilford’s market collapsed catastrophically. In 2004, after 125 years of British photographic excellence, the company entered receivership—corporate owners walked away, leaving the factories silent, the chemistry unused, 125 years of knowledge on the brink of extinction because the world had moved to pixels and forgot the magic of watching silver halide crystals form an image in a tray of developer.
But then came the bittersweet survivor story: a management buyout saved a small fraction of the company, reborn as Harman Technology in Mobberley, proving that a dedicated core of adult hobbyists and professional artists flat-out refused to let this legendary British brand die. Today, Ilford film and paper still exist, manufactured in smaller quantities for the devoted analog photographers who never abandoned film, who still believe in the craft, the ritual, the tangible reality of images fixed in chemistry rather than stored as data. This is the story of how Britain’s photography empire nearly faded away when digital killed film—but survived because some refused to let the magic die, keeping Ilford alive as a testament to the enduring power of analog craftsmanship in a digital world.
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If you’re looking for a molecular modelling kit, try Snatoms, a kit I invented where the atoms snap together magnetically – https://ve42.co/SnatomsV
We’d also like to thank everyone at YKK who helped organise our call, especially Sophia Seco, Engin Ertugrul, Christelle Malot and Matthew Rawstron.
Finally, a big thank you to Christopher Anderson, Anna Oros and Pressley Stevens of the Allegheny College Library for sending us footage of Whitcomb Judson’s original fastener in action.
▀▀▀
0:00 The First Zipper
2:51 Who invented the zipper?
4:20 How does a zipper work?
5:51 The Zipper Maker Machine
7:46 Why is it called a zipper?
9:32 The Novelty Of A Zipper
12:57 The Most Popular Zipper Doesn’t Have Teeth
14:08 Zippers Have A Lock
15:31 Why do zippers have YKK on them?
18:39 How To Fix A Zipper