BARDOTOWN FULL-COLOR PHOTOPRINT GREETING CARDS $8.95
Now, at last, my pinhole-photography taken with my antique Canon AE-1 with Fuji Color Film, is available as stunningly color-printed on a million-dollar printing machine, and mounted professionally on a 100% archival heavy rag cream pastel paper with a matching envelope, packaged for resale & counter-top & Point-of-Purchase racks. Wholesale price is only $3.95 apiece, no further discount. These cards are expensive to produce, but totally worth it. We make about a quarter a pop for all our work and financial risk — we print these on spec, hoping they’ll sell, and so far, we’ve been lucky.
So won’t you give my BardoTown photo greeting cards a try? They look great, and sell well, and they’re a great way to introduce subjects like parallel worlds, past lives and end of life.
“UNDER THE WHARF, BARDOTOWN” by EJ Gold
“BARGE AT MIDNIGHT, BARDOTOWN” by EJ Gold
“NIMBUS STATION #1, BARDOTOWN,” by EJ Gold
“BESSIE’S BAR & GRILLE, BARDOTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“OLD TIN MILLING SHED, BARDOTOWN” by EJ Gold
“WHARFSIDE COLD-WATER FLATS, BARDOTOWN” by EJ Gold
“BACKDOOR EXIT FROM JENNY’S PLACE, BARDOTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“JENNIE’S PLACE FROM DOCKSIDE, BARDOTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“HORSE & CARRIAGE DRIVEWAY, WHARFTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“DOWNTOWN CROWD AT THE PIERS, BARDOTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“FISHING DOCK AT RILL’S ROW, BARDOTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“STRANGE LIGHTS IN THE SKY, BARDOTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“MORNING ON THE WHARVES, BARDOTOWN”, by EJ Gold
“APPROACH TO WHARFTOWN FROM THE OPEN SEA”, by EJ Gold
These are only a few of the more than 1,000 photos I took of the finished BardoTown. The entire setup required a space of 35 feet wide, by eighteen feet deep, and a bank of professional theatrical lights to create the overall effect. The project took over 100 people more than four years to complete as you see it.
All the parts are in storage, waiting for the donation that makes a museum building to house it possible. The HO Scale layout is capable of running the trains in computer-controlled compliance to freight-lading schedules and passenger transport. Lighting is already in the buildings, it just needs hooking up to a transformer, which is also in storage, in fact, a whole battery of transformers await the rebuilding of BardoTown.