The watermark in the lower right corner of the image will not appear on the final print.
Gulfstream I At Detroit Metal Print
by James B Toy
$75.00
Product Details
Gulfstream I At Detroit metal print by James B Toy. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of a metal print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 1/16" thick aluminum. The aluminum sheet is offset from the wall by a 3/4" thick wooden frame which is attached to the back. The high gloss of the aluminum sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results.
Design Details
NOTE: The logo watermark will not appear on purchased products. Photo copyright James B Toy
A twin-engine Gulfstream I is parked at the... more
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3 - 4 business days
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Artist's Description
NOTE: The logo watermark will not appear on purchased products. Photo copyright James B Toy
A twin-engine Gulfstream I is parked at the terminal in Detroit in November 1979. My sister and I were there on family business. While waiting to catch our flight home, I found a few interesting airplanes out the window as the sun was setting.
There doesn't appear to be much information on the internet about the airline, Coleman Air Transport. Apparently it was a startup airline that tried to take advantage of airline deregulation during the Carter Administration. It was established in August 1978, and went out of business sometime in late 1980. This airplane bears the registration number N75DM, one of many numbers is wore in its lifetime. It was registered as N791G in 1965, N67CR in 1966, N20CR in 1969, N75DM in 1977, N725RA in 1985, F-GKES then HB-IRQ in 1990, 4X-ARG in 1993 and D2-EXB in 1999. The plane was scrapped in South Africa in 2009.
About James B Toy
In the fall of 1959, Mr. Toy entered this world at a place called Carmel on California's Monterey Peninsula. Nine years later his family pulled up stakes for the rain-soaked city of Salem, Oregon where he never quite fit in. When he was 12, he and his mother viewed an exhibit of photographs by a Salem newspaper photographer, which inspired him to take his first photography class. During his teenage years he gradually developed his eye for composition and his skills with light and exposure. Though he did not pursue photography as a career, he has continued to document his observations of the world on small frames of film. In 1984, Mr. Toy and his wife Heidi returned to the Monterey Peninsula where his heart belonged. In 1997, on a bit of...
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