I have been photographing women, landscapes, and points of historical interest for the past 30 years. As an all-American guy, my favorite subjects have been all-American girls. The women I have photographed are the proverbial "girl next door." They are brides, moms, co-workers, relatives and friends. Some pictures are old, some are newer, but I hope you enjoy all the pictures of these wonderful ladies. BTW: I'll even throw in a landscape or something historical.
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Comments (17)
flavia49
great capture
HADCANCER
Amazing it could even fly. Do I have to go to Debbielove's gallery? I know I have been bad.....again.
Osper
Nice shot! The planes were painted with great gusto back then!
rainbows
A wonderful capture, dear Rodge, excellent work. Hugs for all day. Di. xx
erlandpil
Amazing erland
debbielove
Nipped on Rog, to spray a few comments around and here was this! OUTSTANDING mate, and thanks for the mention.. Nice paintwork here.. Good to see!!!! Been madly busy here, sorry for lack of commenting.. Hope to catch up when I return in a few days.. Great picture.. Rob
sandra46
GREAT SHOT
bobcatt
rare bird, not many survived it being early WWII aircraft and aready mostly being phased out, till the french got a few of them
jocko500
wonderful shot of this plane
Briney
Curious... more sledgehammer than Tomahawk
Buffalo1
The Hawk 75/ P-36 was a good plane and doesn't get the credit it deserves. It was France's most successful fighter against the Luftwaffe in 1939-40. The Finns used ex-French and Norwegian Hawk 75s with great skill against the Soviets right up to the September 1944 armistice. The British flew their "Mohawks" against the Japanese AAF over India and Burma and didn't withdraw them from combat service until the end of 1943. RAF pilots liked the maneuverability and said they could handle Nakajima Ki-43 "Oscars". The Dutch were less successful with their Hawk 75s in the NEI (Inodnesia)due to engine issues, inexperienced pilots and bad luck. The P-36 is remembered in American service as being the "daddy" of the P-40 as Briney mentions. USAAF P-36 pilots scored at least two kills over Hawaii on December 7, 1941. This was the only time the P-36 flew in combat with the USAAF.
Lashia
Great shot- thanks for sharing! :-)
Selina Photography™
junge1
Great capture Rog!
bmac62
Excellent historic shot Rog...1990s colors from Dayton. I, along with Rob, took pictures of this aircraft in 2009 but I think Rob and I took about the same photo. I recall not liking the manikin on the wing in what looked like stripped pajamas (must have been coveralls of the period). If you ever get a chance, recommend you get back to Dayton...lots of new stuff and changes for the better with their old stuff:)
bobrgallegos
Awesome photo of amazing plane!!
Rainastorm
To cool...was scrolling back to see if my Rob had seen this yet...excellent capture Roger!
rawdodb
Cool!!! Never realized till I started working for them how many different planes they made..