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    Chuck In Oregon

    Old Contemptible
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    Everything posted by Chuck In Oregon

    1. This is another seldom encountered DR Georgia Air Fleet badge. It and the other are two of my rarest and most interesting badges, at least to me. The intricate design amazes me. The badge is not much bigger than a US half dollar. Silver and gold. From my collection.

      © Claimed.

    2. WW II Soviet postal art. This one and a number of others were mounted and displayed for the public. I particularly like this page because it shows both a warrior and a care-giver, and we know that sometimes their roles were reversed. I have quite a few unused and used examples of postal war art in my collection.

      © Claimed.

    3. The USSR issued a set of commemorative stamps on the 25th anniversary of their victory in the Great Patriotic War. This is one page of a set of corresponding first day covers. Then the covers were mounted on pages dedicated, two each, to individual winners of the order Hero of the Soviet Union. The purpose was patriotic displays in public places. I don't know how many pages were created but I have 15 of them. I prefer these B&W pictures to the 1975 set because they depict the act for which they were awarded their HSU. Marina Raskova, for instance, was the founder of and a pilot in the Night Witches, the 588th Night Bomber Regiment. She is shown destroying a German gun emplacement. They often turned their biplane engines off and glided to the target for maximum surprise, hoping for a re-start before they crashed. From my collection.

      © Claimed.

    4. The USSR issued a set of commemorative stamps on the 30th anniversary of their victory in the Great Patriotic War. This is one page of a set of corresponding first day covers. These covers were mounted on pages dedicated, two each, to individual winners of the order Hero of the Soviet Union. The purpose was patriotic displays in public places. I don't know how many pages were created but I have 40 of them. From my collection.

      © Claimed.

    5. Voroshilov Shooters practicing near the city of Khaheti, Georgia, March 3, 1939. With admirers.

      © Claimed.

    6. From the photo album of the company commander @1916. From my collection.

      © Claimed.

    7. From my collection. The DRG existed from 1918 - 1921. Few people have seen one of these badges in person or even in a book. I'm searching for a period photo of a pilot wearing one. The Georgian letters are a K and an A, for Kartuli Aviatsia. The cross is a traditional Georgian Grapevine Cross. The plane is an Ansaldo SVA.10. Wiki says Georgia had ten Ansaldos in 1920.

      © Claimed.

    8. From our cottage at Barking Sands.

      © Claimed.

    9. From a wedding at our home, summer 2014.
    10. This is a scene from Mtskheta, the ancient capital of Georgia. You can see Svetitskhoveli Cathedral on the left behind the homes. Jvari Monestary dominates the heights.

      © Claimed.

    11. That's my darlin' wife, Edythe, once a copper penny redhead. An original oil from a book that was dedicated to her. A Mothers' Day bouquet.

      © Claimed.

    12. I believe this to be a Russian Grigorovich M-5 seaplane on the beach at Trabzon, Turkey, in 1917. The Grigorovich M-5 is a knock-off of the Curtis Model K. This photo is from one of my two Russian photo albums taken by combatants.

      © Claimed.

    13. A friend had some business at a local farm and invited me to join him. I wasn't overly interested in the business when we got there but the farmer invited me to look around, saying he had a few old cars "somewhere." This 1939 Dodge flatbed was my best find. It hasn't been licensed since 1963 but he has used it around the farm since then. He said "Started right up the last time, must have been a couple of years ago." Eminently restorable, this old reliable might still have some good years left in the right hands. Where it now sits it will someday just rust into the ground. Well, that's what barn finds are all about. Chuck

      © Claimed.

    14. Yours looks like item 2504, page 521, in Avers 8. They show only an illustration. I infer from that it is rare or, at least, seldom encountered.
    15. You're right. It is a Georgian TsIK badge from the 1920s-30s, item 2549, page 527, in Avers 8. I stand corrected and still confused. ​Not only that, I can't find my notes about this badge or the group I bought. I'll keep looking. Thank you. Chuck
    16. I sold off my modest deputy's badge collection a few years ago. I could never find the scarce ones and I gave up trying. However, last spring I came across a small Abkhazian group that included, sure enough, an Abkhaz deputy's badge. I'll post the other things separately but I thought this deserved its own thread. Anyone else have any of the rare ones? The only others I kept are part of a 40-year set belonging to a former head of the Georgian KGB.
    17. I'd like to share an aviation badge that I acquired a month or so ago. It is from the Democratic Republic of Georgia Air Force. The DRG existed from 1918 to 1921 and it must have had, I surmise, a very small air arm. The plane is an Ansaldo SVA-10, not one I had heard of before. Wiki says they had 10 Ansaldo aircraft in 1920. The two letters are a K and an A, for Kartuli Aviatsia or Georgian Aviation. The cross is a classic Georgian cross of drooping grape vines known variously as St. Nino's Cross, Georgian Cross or Grapevine Cross. This badge is not yet in my hands but it is in the hands of a close Georgian friend. There is an associated group which I have yet to see or pay for. I'm pretty curious. Enjoy
    18. Could it be for Excellent Service in the Ninth Five Year Plan? Chuck
    19. What TacHel said. You have a wonderful feel for stark realism. It may be time to put self doubt aside go all in with your talent. Not quitting your day job, I'm sure Don would advise against that, but putting yourself out to more important venues and galleries. Oh, did I mention my lack of qualifications to advise on artistic endeavors? As for me, I enjoy your art and I'd like to buy in at the entry level. I have one of Don's paintings (he is definitely not cheap) and we're negotiating on another. He lusts for a 1st gen Colt SAA that I own. I lust for a major work by him... but it is a really nice Colt. Good thread. Chuck
    20. My good friend Don Prechtel is a well-known military and western painter. Your work is fantastic. I'm going to show it to him. Check out his site with the link. I think you'll like it, as will anyone interested in military and old west art, as well as a few other of his favorite themes. Do you already sell your work? Sorry, but this is all new to me. I hope you do. Chuck
    21. Could it be that suicide in exile was the same as murdered in exile?
    22. Well, THAT'S pretty darn interesting. Tell the story!
    23. That would make an excellent screen saver. Great picture.
    24. My thoughts exactly. Why bother?
    25. Well said, Brian. I was a magpie collector for a long time before it dawned on me that there are other ways to collect. What interests me now are documented and attributed items and groups in certain areas, and individual items in a particular theme, say, like early Russian aviation. I'm starting to thin my collection of many individual items that are not in a particular field of interest for me or don't fit a theme that I'm collecting - even nice things - or, at least in a couple of fortunate cases, have become too valuable to hold onto without hiding them in a safe deposit box. No one in the family wants my collectibles or my guns or even my tools. I don't understand it but there it is. What's the point of collecting if you can't bore people with you new acquisitions? I'll sell some collectibles now and my darlin' wife knows to contact Paul Wood about the remainder when the inevitable comes about. In the meantime, I enjoy the heck out of owning and learning from them and participating on this forum and, I must add, collecting more things but with a more sophisticated eye. Maybe.
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