Tango01 | 18 Feb 2017 1:06 p.m. PST |
Superb work!
Main page link Amicalement Armand |
Condotta | 18 Feb 2017 8:30 p.m. PST |
Suberb, indeed. A labour of love. |
Condotta | 18 Feb 2017 8:32 p.m. PST |
Wow, 154 hits at the moment, and not one previous comment. Surely someone before me was impressed. Oh well, thanks for sharing this inspirational work, Armand. |
Tango01 | 18 Feb 2017 10:11 p.m. PST |
Happy you enjoyed it my good friend! Yes… sad days we live about the comments… but… Alas!… there are still people like you here!… (smile)
Amicalement Armand
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Leo Zanza | 19 Feb 2017 8:29 a.m. PST |
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Tango01 | 19 Feb 2017 3:10 p.m. PST |
Glad you like it too my friend!. (smile) Amicalement Armand
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Volunteer | 20 Feb 2017 8:22 a.m. PST |
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Tango01 | 20 Feb 2017 10:57 a.m. PST |
Good… now we are four of us!… (smile) Amicalement Armand
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Poniatowski | 05 May 2017 4:52 a.m. PST |
Why are there so many flags? Also.. very beautiful, but the number of flags is confusing. |
devsdoc | 05 May 2017 1:08 p.m. PST |
I thank at the time of this piece. Most regiments had different colours for each company The Company colours from the Colonel to the lowest Lieutenant (in England up to 10 companies). The Colonel's colour is the plainest colour. Get more added too the colours as the rank gets lower. The "General" of the army sometimes had a copy of the regimental (Colonel's) colour by him so he could use it to signal each regiment. Hope this helps! Be safe Rory |
Volunteer | 06 May 2017 10:59 p.m. PST |
I just gotta say again, Awesome! How does someone have room for something this big? |
Bozkashi Jones | 07 May 2017 3:19 a.m. PST |
Oh, wow. Nice find Armand |