Saturday, September 28, 2013

A tale of 3 photographers.

  This is most likely not relevant, but it was crazy to me.

  I was at a vintage race early this month and it was the best time ever. The only thing that could compare is if peace breaks out in the Middle East and I get to tour the Holy Land with the Pope as my tour guide and he tells amusing anecdotes about the Vatican throughout.

 This was a neat chance to see antique cars in action. Well, the race was delayed for some reason and eventually I found out why.

  Ok, the first photographer is the guy who took the shot. He got an incredible picture of 68 Camaro at the moment of impact. Nice pic for sure. The car is air borne and doing what it was born to do. No slow death in some rich guys garage for this muscle car. No boring Saturdays at cruise night in some parking lot. Die with your boots on you lovely piece of American steel. I am digging those wheels too.

  The second photographer is the one being hurled backwards. He is about to get a helicopter ride of the unexpected sort.  Those are the worst kind of helicopter rides, even worse than the ones where the pilot keeps swerving to stay below the hills and avoid enemy fire. After that he will have months of therapy and a retirement filled with trauma induced arthritis.  The worst part of my day was the overpriced refreshments.  It pays to keep things in perspective.

  But the third guy is the curious one. Notice how he is a consummate pro, totally focused on his work and oblivious to the distractions around him.  It is startling to me that someone can be so unflappable to not even flinch at such mayhem. Where can you find people so calm? His colleague is getting the crap knocked out of him and something through the lens is more interesting than that?  That is the sort of person who gets things done.

  I look at this picture as a life lesson. Sometime shits happens and it gives you a nice picture. And the same shit can happen and give you some broken bones. Or shit can happen and you just ignore it. All depends on if you are 10 feet to the right or left.

  Second lesson is to stay on focus. I need to be like this photographer.

  Currently I am filling an order for 64,000 bases. It is nice to see some folks with decent sized collections.  Skirmish games are a fad.  Bring back the 1 figure = 1 man  Waterloo recreations I say.

  After that will get back on target.



 

 

 

1 comment:

  1. Hello Ken,
    I've seen your post over on Dakka, and would like to encourage you to continue posting there, if only in the thread that you created for the roadblocks if that's where your comfort level lies.
    http://www.dakkadakka.com/dakkaforum/posts/list/556920.page
    In it, I've made some suggestions and asked people to post images of your buildings, etc painted and in use in order to raise the profile of your stuff. (I didn't even know about the building - for example). I've ordered from you before (a couple hundred bases) but with those I'm well-stocked. I'd also ask/advise/beg you to use the same thread and update it when you have new products available (just change the title to something like "Proxie Models Thread - New Release XYZ December 2012") since, again, I didn't know you had 120mm bases until reading through your blog posts just now, and those are again, something I'm sure I can find a use for.
    Hope to see you again soon on Dakka.
    cheers mate!

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