Dan Jones wrote:
I'm not sure when pinking dates from, but certainly pre-WWII. A slick salesman sold me a roll of unpinked fabric tape once with the claim that with the new material, chemicals, and processes, etc that pinked tapes were a thing of the past. You know what - he was DEAD WRONG - as evidenced by several tapes on the Stearman's lowers that have started to lift over the years. Never, NEVER again. "Pain in the right ruddy posterior" does not begin to convey my opinion of unpinked fabric tapes. And whoever invented pinking was a proper genius.
So you aren't going to import the authentic Chinese Fabric Nibbling Beavers to 'edge' your fabric on the Stearman to match the CJ-6? Disappointed.

Dan Jones wrote:
Fly safe. I enjoy your column.
Dan
Thank you. We aim to entertain.
LadyO2Pilot wrote:
Decided to explore history of pinking shears....you got my curiosity up
I found that quote as well, thanks for highlighting it. Poses the question as to what kind of pinking tools there were before (and how far before) and how they were used. Mrs JDK (a quilter) guessed at the 1890s for 'trying to invent pinking shears'. Not bad. It's clear that the British either didn't have access or didn't trust their use on aircraft fabric. Nor, I suspect did anyone else in W.W.I. I'm trying to think of any time I've seen pinked fabric on a non-'modern' aircraft. Odd. I'll do a bit more asking around!
Ober. You are on your own. You know
High Noon?
