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USO Canteen FReeper Style....Nose Art and Pin Ups go to War....May 8,2002
FRiends of the USO Canteen FReeper Style and Snow Bunny
Posted on 05/08/2002 3:01:00 AM PDT by Snow Bunny
The practice of personalizing military aircraft with custom artwork began a few years before WWI, and continues to this day. The peak of this practice occurred during WWII, when hundreds of thousands of aircraft were adorned with such artwork, generally painted near the nose of the aircraft... hence the term, "Nose Art."
Often, flight and ground crews wore a smaller version of the artwork painted on the backs of their jackets. Of course, the quality of the artwork varied, from crude to excellent, depending on the skill of the artist.
The sultry, wonderful world of Nose Art is as varied as the individuals who dressed up and decorated the aircraft and the feelings of the men who flew them into combat. Though this variety is staggering, common themes run through them all from World War II to the end of the Korean War when the genre all but left the scene.
Humor, pathos, slogans, girls, cartoons, nicknames, hometowns, girls, patriotism, dishing it to the enemy, warriors, girls, youthful bravado, girls...these transcended nationality as both Allies and Axis pilots went to war in their individually marked chariots. Men at war separated from home, family, loved ones and a familiar way of life sought ways to personalize and escape the very harsh business surrounding them. For the most part they thought about women, represented on the sides of aircraft in the most tender of ways to the most degrading. These men spent many hours longing for the tenderness a woman could bring to their lives...and for the sexual pleasure they could provide. Whether top level commanders ordered it off the aircraft or not, the men let their feelings flow onto their machines.
As their aircraft reflected, fighter pilots of both wars were busy strafing, bombing, hunting for aerial kills and protecting friendly aircraft, airfields, supply lines and troops. But the ground crews were just as busy trying to make sure the aircraft they had generously loaned to the pilot was on the line each day and ready to bring him home. There is never enough credit to be given to these men who worked ten hours for every hour the pilot flew.
The fame and glory attached to the pilot over shadowed his faithful ground ponders, but this usually did not prevent the enlisted men and officers from becoming devoted friends. Each needed the other to make the mission successful, and a pilot's crew would experience as much pride for a victory, knowing they were behind the guns as well. As a result, nose art was often the choice of the ground crew rather than the pilot. Some units made room for both by having the pilot's art on the left side and the ground crew's on the right.
Unique among fighters, the P-38 Lightning had three noses to adorn, allowing a separate canvas for the pilot, crew chief, armorer and radio man.
Pin Ups.......
The Professor is trying to give you a more scientific explanation of how this kind of cheesecake affected the average American soldier.
World War II pinups appeared in many forms, from fighter and bomber nose art and bomber jacket art to calendars, postcards, matchbooks, and playing cards. The term pinup was coined during World War II, when soldiers would "pin up" these idealized pictures on their barracks and foxhole walls, and sailors did the same to lockers and bulkheads. There were photos of Betty Grable and Rita Hayworth and Lana Turner, and hundreds of other calendar girls and Hollywood starlets whose only claim to fleeting fame was their image seared into a GI's brain from a ragged page of YANK or Esquire magazine.
"Servicemen soon began to create their own pinup art, decorating the noses of their planes and their bomber jackets with more primitive paintings of shapely babes."
Betty Grable as she appeared in a map-reading manual. This image was used to get pilots used to reading map grids.
An early centerfold featuring Dorothy Lamour, "... the No. 1 pinup girl of the U.S. Army."
Nose art was a popular morale builder, it ranged from tame cartoon characters to some really "RACEY" women.
It must be remembered that these men were young, at war, and homesick at times. The names of mothers, girlfriends and colorful limericks were often the inspiration for this unique art form. These pictures and captions are published here for historical value, exactly as they appeared on the planes.
TOPICS: Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: usocanteen
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To: Snow Bunny
The Canteen is such a special place. I am so glad you created it and are its lovely hostess, my FRiend.
601
posted on
05/08/2002 10:21:09 PM PDT
by
Jen
To: AFVetGal
Sweet Dreams Jen
God Bless You
To: AFVetGal; Mama Bear
Yes, looks like it bases a lot of the tutorials on PaintShopPro, too. Look what I found for Mama Bear!
603
posted on
05/08/2002 10:27:32 PM PDT
by
MistyCA
To: AFVetGal
Goodnight,, sweet dreams.
To: Snow Bunny
This looks like Sam to me
605
posted on
05/08/2002 10:30:47 PM PDT
by
MistyCA
To: AFVetGal
Thanks, but it really takes you and everyone helping and that makes me cry from happiness, a real oneness of hearts here.
To: AFVetGal
Night, Jen! See you tomorrow! :)
607
posted on
05/08/2002 10:31:49 PM PDT
by
MistyCA
To: MistyCA;Mama_Bear
Misty that is adorable for Mama_Bear.
To: Snow Bunny
Thanks for you vision! Without that, the Canteen would never have happened! :)
609
posted on
05/08/2002 10:33:17 PM PDT
by
MistyCA
To: MistyCA
That is cute too. I can't even remember exactly how it looked but I remember seeing it.hahahaa....
That is a good one too.I know it was a desk and a computer.
To: Snow Bunny; 68-69tonkingulfyatchclub
thanks...I have one here for you too!
Tonk, will you please capture this so Bunny can get it from you? Thanks soooo much! :) Oh...you might have to do the one for Mama Bear, too! Hope you don't mind :)
611
posted on
05/08/2002 10:37:19 PM PDT
by
MistyCA
To: Snow Bunny
Yes, I think I remember which one you are talking about. Maybe Sam still has it handy. :)
612
posted on
05/08/2002 10:40:18 PM PDT
by
MistyCA
To: MistyCA;Snow Bunny
Snow Bunny, what happens when you right click on it?
I can save it, what do you get?
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
It's weird. Clara was able to save the gif doll I sent to her, but Bunny and Billie can't. It says they have to save them as bmp files.
614
posted on
05/08/2002 10:44:00 PM PDT
by
MistyCA
To: 68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub;SAMWolf;AFVetGal;Daisyscarlett;4TheFLag;Whoever;Victoria Delsoul...
Count the garden by the flowers, never by the leaves that fall. Count your life with smiles and not the tears that roll.
To: MistyCA;Snow Bunny;Mama_Bear
I saved these 2 (for Snow Bunny and Mama_Bear).
If they can't save them I'll re-post them.
I just need to be very careful with my time.
I'm overloaded already, if I start saving and re-posting graphics for everyone
it will really put me further behind the old 8 ball.
To: MistyCA;68-69TonkinGulfYatchClub
How beautiful, this is so special.
When I copy the url it says gif.but then I try to Save it says bitmap ( bmp.)waaaaaaa
To: MistyCA
Oh Misty, how adorable. :-)
I wish I could save it as an animation but it will only save as a single image "bitmap". I have tried everything and can't figure out how to get around this. But, even without animation it is still cute. :-)
To: Mama_Bear;Snow Bunny
Hold on for a minute, let me try posting them.
To: Snow Bunny
When I copy the url it says gif.but then I try to Save it says bitmap ( bmp.)waaaaaaa Yes, for me too. :-(
I wonder if people are doing something to their animations to keep people from copying and saving them? I have never run up against this before.
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