Q for Queenie, ED930 – A66-1

As I said, research, what a fucking nightmare!

Update on Q-Queenie, after weeks of trawling Aviation forums etc, I thought I’d got Queenie right, until I heard the Pilot was alive, living in Melbourne & in his 90’s-so I tracked him down!

The nose art, I only ever found a few small B+W pictures & had no idea as to the colour, I decided on a red the same as the letters on the sides of the Lancasters. Spot on! Thanks to Peter Isaacson, DFC, AFC, DFM (Pilot) for confirming this, the flying Kangaroo with wings carrying a bomb & Queenie v1 next to it.

The plane was complete! Or so I thought, I left off the top turret as this model Lancaster was built without. Where’s the top Turret? asked the Pilot. Did it have one? Direct quote from Peter Issacson “Q for Queenie flew out as ED930, when she arrived at Laverton she was re classified A66-1 & a top turret fitted & then transferred from RTAF to RAAF”

What an amazing man! Now able to put this all together & after almost 70 years, how wrong people are with their facts, I feel good in that I can now put this right, thanks to the Original Pilot that flew the damn thing from Prestwick to Australia & under Sydney Harbour Bridge, way back in 1943!

I now have to draw on a Top Turret….. *Sigh* Almost there!

Q for Queenie -ED930 (A66-1)

Well, research, what a fcuking nightmare that is!

Doing my latest picture, the first Lancaster to fly to Australia flew under Sydney Harbour Bridge. Wow!

On 22 May 1943, the brand new Lancaster “Q” for Queenie, ED 930, took off from Prestwick in Scotland headed for Amberley in Australia. It flew via Montreal, Ottowa, San Francisco, Hawaii, and Canton Island finally arriving at Amberley airfield, west of Brisbane, on 4 June 1943. The flying time for the long journey was 74 hours. It was piloted by Peter Isaacson from 156 Squadron RAF. It then flew on to Mascot airfield in Sydney Thanks to Peter Dunn from http://www.ozatwar.com/for help in locating the Pilot.

I trawled everywhere to gather info to recreate this image, from the nose art to identification markings, to the plane itself, there were so many variations of the Lancaster. As far as I could deduce, it was believed she flew with ED930 despite being reclassified A66-1. Great, this is what I used! Then I receive an email telling me the Pilot was still alive & living in Melbourne! After extensive trawling I get an email address for Peter & fired off my questions. He’s alive & well indeed & replied, albeit brief but cleared up a lot, including the fact she flew under her re classification of A66-1 & NOT ED930 as commonly believed-Thank you Peter. I have a couple more questions for Peter & then my pic will be complete. I give you Q for Queenie! (Lo Res)

She’s not quit finished yet, just awaiting the Pilots final approval.

Flight Lieutenant Peter Isaacson, DFC, AFC, DFM (Captain)

The Crew on this flight were as follows;

Flight Lieutenant Peter Isaacson, DFC, AFC, DFM (Captain)
Flight Lieutenant Robert Nielsen, DFM (Navigator)
Flight Lieutenant Alan Ritchie, DFM (2nd Navigator & Bomb Aimer)
Pilot Officer M.D. (Don) Delaney (Flight Engineer)
Pilot Officer E.M. (Bill) Copley, DFM (Wireless Air Gunner)
Flight Sergeant J. Grose (Air Gunner)
Flight Sergeant Archie Page (Air Gunner)
Corporal Claude Spencer (Airframe Fitter)

Gotta love the Wino

Do you remember Amy Winehouse? Well before she became the love child of Alex Higgins and Brigitte Nielsen she was quite a popular songstress with several chart-topping ditties. Well it seems as though she’s getting itchy feet again and has finally pushed her arse into a recording studio. The pictures show Amy leaving EMI’s ‘World Famous Abbey Road Studios ©’ but let’s not get ourselves too excited just yet though – for all we know they could have just had a free bar. It’s been so long since ‘Back To Black’ that it actually IS now retro rather than just sounding retro.

Do we need her as either a singer or a celebrity ‘icon’ anymore? Is she too much hard work to be arsed with now that we’ve got Adele, who is completely house-trained? Or has celebrity life been a bit too sensible without the blood-stained ballet pumps of yore? When making your decision – remember – wherever Amy goes, a Blake is never far behind (Boo Hiss)

Me? You know I love this girl!

Printing…. terms used

Printing has an unusual terminology that is attached to it. Below is a small list of terms you will run into when talking with your printer. Although not totally complete, the terms listed below will get you well on your way to understanding your printer and the language that they use.

Bleed – A bleed occurs when your color or image extends off of the printed piece, typically bleeds are created when the printed piece is trimmed.
CMYK – Cyan, Magenta, Yellow and Black are the colors used in 4 color process printing. On the printing press they are run in a specific order. Black, Cyan, Magenta and Yellow, the most transparent of the four and containing the most varnish in the formula is yellow and is laid down last. The most opaque color, black, is laid down first. Following this sequence allows for brighter imaging and better control of color.
Color Densitometer – A piece of equipment used by press personnel to determine the density of the ink color being laid down on the printed sheet. It has a numerical digital read out and the higher the readout on the densitometer, the greater the amount of ink that is being laid down on the sheet. While there is a wide variance in the numbers used, the average range is:

Cyan and Magenta reading around 135 to 145……… Yellow around 105 and Black anywhere from 175 to 210………….. This is only a generalization and the densities that are run should be left up to the press personnel.
Color Density – The amount of ink printed on the sheet.

CTP – Computer to Plate. A process that bypasses the use of film when creating the image that is receptive to ink on the printing plate.

Emboss – Impressing an image by forming the paper using a die that is cast in the shape of the image you want to create. When pressure is applied, the paper takes the form of the die.

Film – A sheet of material that is processed with the image on it. This material will be placed over the printing plate and with the use of light, burning the image into the printing plate, determining the ink receptive areas of the plate.

Halftone – The screening of a continuous tone image, converting the image into different sized, yet, equally spaced dots.

Impression – Each time the sheet passes through the press and is printed, it is an impression. The terminology is useful in production scheduling and estimating because it determines the quantity of the run and the efficiency and speed of the press and the operator.

Large Format – A term that describes the printing of large sized substrates. Printed pieces would include large posters, POP(Point of Purchase) signage and banners. The printers that are used are typically inkjet or IRIS printers. This is an evolutionary segment of the print world and the technology, chemistries and equipment are constantly changing.

Moiré – A pattern that is created from incorrect screen angles seen in the CMYK printing process

Offset – The printing process that uses a blanket to receive the ink from the plate and then impresses it onto a sheet of paper as the paper passes between the blanket and a hard steel cylinder called an Impression Cylinder.

Perfect Bind – A type of binding that combines the cover and the inside pages on the spine with glue. Magazine examples that are perfect bound are Photoshop User, Mac Design, Graphic Arts Monthly and Communication Arts.
Registration – The alignment of dots in relation to each other. When the cyan, magenta, yellow and black plates are aligned and brought into focus, the printed piece is considered to be in register.

RIP – Raster Image Processing………… a computer language that arranges the dots, solids, lines and type in a particular pattern concerning densities and angles. The function of the RIP is to send instructions to the film processor, telling the processor where to place each item and what angle each item is to be placed in relation to the other items on the film or combination of films used in creating the image.

Saddle Stitch – The binding of a book using wire staples on the binding edge to hold the book together. Some magazine and flyer examples are PC Connection, Micro Warehouse and the Java Developers Journal.
Score – A crease that is impressed into the paper. Scoring will allow for exact folding on heavier stocks and helps to eliminate the cracking of some substrates.
Separations – In four color process printing you have a continuous tone image that is separated into four different colors, CMYK, enabling it to be printed. The process begins with scanning an image. The scanned image is then separated into the four process colors. These are processed on film flats with each flat representing a separation.
Sheet Fed Press – A printing press that prints individual sheets of paper as opposed to rolls.

Signature – A parent sheet that consists of 4, 8 or 16 pages depending on the size of the montage that is built for the press it is scheduled to run on. The signature is then folded, collated(depending on how many pages are needed to complete the project), glued or stitched and then trimmed.

Spot Color-PMS-Pantone – Colors that are mixed in batches and are identified by a number. The number can be followed by a C (Coated) or U ( Uncoated). The formula is designed for the type of substrate it is to be printed on taking into consideration the porosity of the paper.
Trapping – The overlay or over printing of dots in relation to each other to compensate for miss-registration on the printing press creating an illusion of tight register.
Web Press – A printing press that prints rolls of paper

Katy Perry & Russell Brand

After several exhausting months of smug, reformed swordsman Russell Brand has ‘fessed up to the fact that marriage is about as fun as watching an ant slowly die over several years.

Mr lover lover himself, who once claimed to have bedded 1000 wimmin, says he now spends more time pruning hedges than giving his wife Katy Perry  a poke – and that things are all a bit, well, samey.

No-longer-randy-Russ, said: “I can’t believe I used to have sex 20 times a week, especially now I’m married. But now I’m a bloody good gardener.”

Talking (and probably crying) to Piers Morgan on his dreadful inspirational Life Stories show, Brand droned on about how dull life has become now he’s stopped snorting coke off prostitutes’ body parts.

“It’s difficult to get used to one person, and being in the same house with them every day.

“And she takes ages to get ready. It’s unbelievable, I had no idea what went on, I was never normally around for that bit.

“If she leaves stuff lying around, I have to deal with it, and if I leave stuff on the floor I have to pick it up. That confuses me.

“I see her a lot, that’s what marriage is, like it or lump it, she is always around.”

On staying faithful to his poptastic missus for the rest of his life, he replied: “Like with everything, drugs, alcohol, I take it one step at a time.

“Of course marriage is for life, and that’s what I wanted.”

“I’ve never been in love before Katy, I’m not one for crying, but I got choked at the wedding.”

He even admits mini Brands are on the cards, saying: “Yeah children, that would be good wouldn’t it..?”

He quipped: “I’m aware I have no recourse if they misbehave. ‘Expelled from school for drugs? Well done, you’re on target.'”

I give it six months, tops.

Taylor & the Lesbians

She may be only seventeen, but Taylor Momsen sure knows exactly how to draw attention to herself ROCK out.

The ex Gossip Girl star-cum-publicity machine surrounded herself with random undressed females and did some faintly sexual dancing at a recent gig.

Taylor and her band, The Pretty Reckless, performed to hoards of perverts fans at the 4th annual One Night In… Austin, Texas last weekend.

But despite her efforts, her unique brand of “talent” has gone predominantly unnoticed by the most important man in pop, if not the world, Simon Cowell.

Momsen failed to make Cowell’s elite list for US X Factor. Asked about a recent report which said the actress/model/singer/goth is to co-host the show, Cowell said:

“Who? I don’t know who that is. Unless there’s something someone’s not telling me. But no, as far as I know, she is not being considered.”

Cue more make up, less clothes and some more lesbians (“,)

Dame Elizabeth Taylor

passed away this morning. Very sad news, the legend was only 79-years-old. Although the cause of death hasn’t been confirmed, it is known that the actress was treated in hospital last month for congestive heart failure following and op to replace a leaky valve in 2009

Away from the film set, she was obviously better known for her personal life – oh, if only they’d had the interweb back in the 1960s, she’d have been an HM favourite. Her eight weddings include TWO to Welsh film star Richard Burton, and, more recently, it was her friendship with Michael Jackson that provided speculation.

 

Talking about working with her on the set of Meeting Mrs. Jenkins in 1966, Burton said:

“She was unquestionably gorgeous. I can think of no other word to describe a combination of plentitude, frugality, abundance, tightness. She was lavish. She was a dark unyielding largesse. She was, in short, too bloody much.”

RIP, Liz

Don’t know where to turn?

I found this quite amusing, no idea where it originated but someone has a funny sense of humour (“,)

 

Nexus of the universe?

No Bills please

Well, that backfired...

Just Because

Just because you don’t like who I am or what I do means I’m gonna change it, I’m me & I like being me.