Sale on canvas prints! Use code ABCXYZ at checkout for a special discount!
Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.
by Don Mercer
$70.00
This product is currently out of stock.
Image Size
Product Details
Here it is... the towel that's taking the internet by storm. Our round beach towels are 60" in diameter and made from ultra-soft plush microfiber with a 100% cotton back. Perfect for a day at the beach, a picnic, an outdoor music festival, or just general home decor. This versatile summer essential is a must-have this season!
Design Details
On June 11, 2016, I had a real treat, as the outgoing squadron commander, Zeus, of my former Virginia Air National Guard unit, the 149th Fighter... more
Dimensions
60" Diameter Not Including Tassles
Care Instructions
Machine wash cold and tumble dry with low heat.
Ships Within
2 - 3 business days
On June 11, 2016, I had a real treat, as the outgoing squadron commander, Zeus, of my former Virginia Air National Guard unit, the 149th Fighter Squadron, arranged for me to obtain a pass onto Langley AFB, Virginia. This allowed me to shoot from near the end of runway 08, the departure end based on the winds that morning, the F-22 "Raptor" fighter and T-38 adversarial air trainer that the squadron now flies. The aircraft that I once flew in 1974-81, when I was a fighter pilot in the 149th Tactical Fighter Squadron (TFS), as it was then known, was the venerable F-105 "Thunderchief." That aircraft was affectionately known as the "Thud" and may now be found in museums, on pedestals at bases and other places around the country, or in the "boneyard" in Arizona, if they have not been scrapped. Now, if I could only trade in a couple flight hours in the Thud from my logbook for a ride in the Raptor!
Don Mercer is an author and freelance fine art photographer. Research for one book took him to the middle of Cambodia in 1999, as he was the first from among his wartime unit to return to that country. During the War in Southeast Asia - known to most as the Vietnam War, he flew over two hundred combat missions as an Air Force pilot in the Cessna O-2A. His combat assignment was as a Forward Air Controller, or FAC. The majority of his combat missions were flown in Cambodia at night. While in Southeast Asia in 1970-71, his interest in photography intensified with the purchase of his first two of numerous Nikon cameras. Black and white, as well as color, 35mm, and Super 8 movie films were used at the time. The transition to digital...
$70.00
There are no comments for A Raptor Taxiing Back to the Ramp. Click here to post the first comment.