welcome to WIX! Nice to see a new face, and I like the sharp graphics.
siegeworks wrote:
Thanks mate, I like your whistling death design. A warbird artist I know told me something very simular about the Beaufighter although he said it was knicknamed the whispering death for a reason that sounded very simular. I have no idea if the Beaufighter ever served in the pacific though.
The Beaufighter not only served in the Pacific, but was also built in Australia for the Royal Australian Air Force, as well as British built ones that flew with the RAF and RAAF. Also the USAAF used Beaus as night fighters in the Med and N Africa under reverse lend-lease, the USAAF having neglected night fighter design (as had most air forces including the pre-war RAF).
The 'Whistling Death' / 'Whispering Death' is almost certainly entirely Allied propaganda, with absolutely no evidence the Japanese ever used the term, and such a language concept also being something that just doesn't fit Japanese language and culture. The only solid primary evidence I was able to unearth (when working on an article on such things) with a number of contacts helping was the fact that an RAF Beaufighter squadron, in, IIRC, Burma, came up with the term as a spoof for an Allied journalist, who then published the term. I've not found anything even that solid for the Corsair's variant version.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Be ... al_serviceSo file under 'Myth', but it makes a great T shirt slogan!
siegeworks wrote:
Anyone for Migs? Ive just finished this one. Did I mention I love doing requests!
Nice! Your design's good, but don't do the classic mistake with 'Mig' - Remember it is MiG - lower case 'i' upper case 'M' and 'G', remembering the
two designers Mikoyan and Gurevich in the Bureau.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MikoyanAnd watch out for using some company and trade names - (in)famously Boeing do go after people using their name, logo or aircraft names, in other products not authorised or endorsed or paying Boeing for the privilege. Most Boeing aircraft names are trademarked, and Boeing own a lot of legacy aircraft identities too.
http://www.boeing.com/companyoffices/aboutus/corpid/Bill Greenwood wrote:
A few warbird shirts offer both a pocket and a collar, not just a T shirt so that they look a little better to wear away from the airport.
I think these are usually known as polo shirts, and are my preference.
A quick search on Wiki shows they originally came up as tennis shirts, later adopted for polo and golf, and were actually invented by Lacoste, rather than just being branded as such!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polo_shirtWe live & learn.
Regards,