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Dc-3 Spiral Notebook featuring the digital art Feelin' Blue by Adam Burch

Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.

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Feelin' Blue Spiral Notebook

Adam Burch

by Adam Burch

$17.00

Size

Image Size

 
 

Product Details

Our spiral notebooks are 6" x 8" in size and include 120 pages which are lined on both sides. The artwork is printed on the front cover which is made of thick paper stock, and the back cover is medium gray in color. The inside of the back cover includes a pocket for storing extra paper and pens.

Design Details

BW-1 or Bluie West One was a remote airfield located near Narsarsuraq, Greenland. During World War II, the airfield served as a stopover point for... more

Ships Within

2 - 3 business days

Additional Products

Feelin' Blue Digital Art by Adam Burch

Digital Art

Feelin' Blue Canvas Print

Canvas Print

Feelin' Blue Framed Print

Framed Print

Feelin' Blue Art Print

Art Print

Feelin' Blue Poster

Poster

Feelin' Blue Metal Print

Metal Print

Feelin' Blue Acrylic Print

Acrylic Print

Feelin' Blue Wood Print

Wood Print

Feelin' Blue Greeting Card

Greeting Card

Feelin' Blue Spiral Notebook

Spiral Notebook

Feelin' Blue Tapestry

Tapestry

Spiral Notebook Tags

spiral notebooks airplane spiral notebooks dc-3 spiral notebooks c-47 spiral notebooks aircraft spiral notebooks airliner spiral notebooks dakota spiral notebooks greenland spiral notebooks usaaf spiral notebooks usaac spiral notebooks usaf spiral notebooks ww2 spiral notebooks world war ii spiral notebooks

Digital Art Tags

digital art airplane digital art dc-3 digital art c-47 digital art aircraft digital art airliner digital art dakota digital art greenland digital art usaaf digital art usaac digital art usaf digital art ww2 digital art world war ii digital art

Artist's Description

BW-1 or "Bluie West One" was a remote airfield located near Narsarsuraq, Greenland. During World War II, the airfield served as a stopover point for aircraft making the treacherous Atlantic Crossing from Goose Bay, Newfoundland, to England or Scotland.

Successfully navigating to Bluie West One required skill, prospective customers had to first select the correct fjord to gain access. Only one of three nearly identical fjord mouths would lead to the airfield. The other two would terminate at the end of a dead end canyon, with walls too high to climb over, and without enough room to turn around!

Thus it was that the act of "Feelin' Blue" became a mating dance more intricate and ultimately satisfying than any other local variety of aviator's dalliance. Hundreds of thousands of aircraft passed through Bluie West One (some safely, some not) until it's closure as a military base in 1958.

Today, the airport at Narsarsuraq still serves civilian air traffic, but has never...

About Adam Burch

Adam Burch

An aerospace art, engineering and visualization company located in Colorado. We pride ourselves on bringing history to life!

 

$17.00