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Went to the John Dillinger museum
For a project I had to do for my History of Crime class, I had to visit the John Dillinger Museum in Indiana. It had pretty much everything on the man and his gang and anyone associated. I was more interested in the guns. I saw the entire case that contained most of the guns of the gang, though the full auto pistol was in a separate case and at the entrance, there was one 1921 Tommy buy with a 30 round magazine for some reason. I didn't see the modified Winchester that Homer used. They didn't really labeled all the guns with their exact names, like putting down "Colt .45" or "Tommy Gun". They did however mislabeled the drum mag as a drum clip. There was also a glass case full of toys that were out at the time and one of the toy was this very realistic cap gun of the 1903 Colt pistol with white colored grips. I wished I could take pictures but they said no flash photography.
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"There's a fine line between not listening and not caring...I like to think I walk that line everyday of my life." Blessed be the LORD, my rock, Who trains my hands for war, And my fingers for battle Psalm 144:1 “It is always wrong to use force, unless it is more wrong not to.” |
#2
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Quote:
just kidding. sounds kewl man
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Every man's life ends the same way, it's only the details of how he lived that distinguish one from another.. |
#3
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On camera flashes suck anyway. You can tell the rank amateur pics by the way they take a 'snapshot' of their guns (look at Gunbroker, yeesh) If you can, take a tripod, set the color temperature of your camera to the ambient light (problematic if you're getting a mix of sky reflection (blueish) and tungsten (orange/Yellow). And take a timed exposure. I wouldn't want to look at an on camera flash pic anyway, too much reflection back at the camera.
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