If it says "Professional" in the name, it's the 2-part stuff. Bondo "Professional" Glazing and Spot Putty. You have to be careful because their 1-part stuff comes in an almost identical looking package.
1) Was your introduction to modeling at home? No
2) From whom? A friend
3) What kind of models (cars, planes, trains, etc)? Cars
4) What did the person who introduced you to modeling do for a living ? Full-time kid...
5) How old were you? 6 or 7
6) About what year was your introduction? 1964-65
I just bought this one a few days ago. Cheap and simple, been using it every day. It works great! I only wish I had bought one sooner!
http://www.amazon.com/kitchen-dining/dp/B000G20TCQ
It has 5 stackable trays. If you need more room between trays you can take one or two of the trays and cut out the mesh part, leaving just the outer ring that will now act as a spacer between the other trays.
It is! This week's car is a 2002 Gillet Vertigo.
http://www.conceptcarz.com/view/photo/121407,11611/2002-Gillet-Vertigo-Streiff_photo.aspx
Who got it right:
Badluck 13
wisdonm
Johnny
george 53
sjordan2
G Holding
Draggon
Chris R
mr chips
matthijsgrit
trogdor
Ok people... music from A to ZZ...
What do you get when you take equal parts of ABBA ("Gimme Gimme Gimme a Man After Midnight") and ZZ Top ("Gimme All Your Lovin'") and put them in a blender?
Prepare to have your mind blown...
I never got into it, but my parents were big on a backyard garden. My dad always had a "mini farm" going in the back yard every year. Tomatoes, peppers, lettuce, carrots, onions, cabbage, you name it, he grew it.
If you mean the type of "music" that's made in a deliberate effort to sell to as wide an audience as possible, then yes. That sort of "music" has always been designed as nothing more than "product."
But when you look at the music that was created by people like the Beatles, the Stones, Led Zeppelin, Pink Floyd, and many others of that era... there's so much more to it than just trying to crank out the next top 40 hit. Back then there were musicians who took their music seriously. They didn't let the record companies tell them what to do or how to do it... they did it their way. That kind of artistic independence and originality is gone from today's music. In the '60s-'70s you had musicians making music. Today you have bean counters making "music."