U of S | Mailing List Archive | alt-photo-process-l | Re: RE: bromoil boot camp

Re: RE: bromoil boot camp



Hi Peg,

Good to hear from you here.

So how are the kallitypes?

Sandy







At 6:58 PM -0500 8/29/07, pfredi@bellsouth.net wrote:
well mark, as you know tennessee has the first roadkill law that says if you hit it you can eat it. and we
eat them down here. remember that roast i fixed for you while you were here.......well........ you really
liked that one/////
peg
 From: Don Bryant <dsbryant@bellsouth.net>
 Date: 2007/08/27 Mon PM 01:54:22 EST
 To: alt-photo-process-l@usask.ca
 Subject: RE: bromoil boot camp

 Mark,

 Not sure if you can answer this, but are these critters farm raised or
 slaughtered in the wild for their hides?

 -----Original Message-----
 From: D. Mark Andrews [mailto:mark@dragonbones.com]
 Sent: Monday, August 27, 2007 2:48 PM
 To: alt-photo-process-l@usask.ca
 Subject: RE: bromoil boot camp

 My family from Arkansas would have called it a polecat :-) I think they are
 part of the weasel family. Their hair is considered a cheap alternative to
 sable.

 Mark

 -----Original Message-----
 From: Don Bryant [mailto:dsbryant@bellsouth.net]
 Sent: Monday, August 27, 2007 11:38 AM
 To: alt-photo-process-l@usask.ca
 Subject: RE: bromoil boot camp


 Mark,

 >
 The primary brush is made of hog
 hair and Fitch for finer work. His site is www.bromoil.com
 >

 What is a Fitch?

 Thanks,

 Don Bryant