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Flipping Question, by jboy on Jul 7, 2007 1:50:58 GMT 1, I've said this before, but while talking about greengrocers, here we go again... A bagger is like someone who takes the last pint of milk in a supermarket just as you were reaching out for it then says to you "I don't want this milk, in fact I'm a vegan, but I'll sell it to you for £10, there's nowhere else open, so if you don't want dry cornflakes tomorrow morning hand over the money" ;D
Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs)
Peace
J
I've said this before, but while talking about greengrocers, here we go again... A bagger is like someone who takes the last pint of milk in a supermarket just as you were reaching out for it then says to you "I don't want this milk, in fact I'm a vegan, but I'll sell it to you for £10, there's nowhere else open, so if you don't want dry cornflakes tomorrow morning hand over the money" ;D Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs) Peace J
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Flipping Question, by discoduster on Jul 7, 2007 6:06:30 GMT 1, I've said this before, but while talking about greengrocers, here we go again... A bagger is like someone who takes the last pint of milk in a supermarket just as you were reaching out for it then says to you "I don't want this milk, in fact I'm a vegan, but I'll sell it to you for £10, there's nowhere else open, so if you don't want dry cornflakes tomorrow morning hand over the money" ;D Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs) Peace J
Well I'm glad we've got to the bottomof that.
I've said this before, but while talking about greengrocers, here we go again... A bagger is like someone who takes the last pint of milk in a supermarket just as you were reaching out for it then says to you "I don't want this milk, in fact I'm a vegan, but I'll sell it to you for £10, there's nowhere else open, so if you don't want dry cornflakes tomorrow morning hand over the money" ;D Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs) Peace J Well I'm glad we've got to the bottomof that.
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Flipping Question, by corblimeylimey on Jul 7, 2007 10:48:05 GMT 1, I've said this before, but while talking about greengrocers, here we go again... A bagger is like someone who takes the last pint of milk in a supermarket just as you were reaching out for it then says to you "I don't want this milk, in fact I'm a vegan, but I'll sell it to you for £10, there's nowhere else open, so if you don't want dry cornflakes tomorrow morning hand over the money" ;D Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs) Peace J
;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D
Nice & simple
Bagger = milk Flipper = eggs
Between them they could make a quiche ;D but it'll be an expensive one
I've said this before, but while talking about greengrocers, here we go again... A bagger is like someone who takes the last pint of milk in a supermarket just as you were reaching out for it then says to you "I don't want this milk, in fact I'm a vegan, but I'll sell it to you for £10, there's nowhere else open, so if you don't want dry cornflakes tomorrow morning hand over the money" ;D Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs) Peace J ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D Nice & simple Bagger = milk Flipper = eggs Between them they could make a quiche ;D but it'll be an expensive one
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Flipping Question, by jboy on Jul 7, 2007 14:37:23 GMT 1, Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs) Peace J ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D Nice & simple Bagger = milk Flipper = eggs Between them they could make a quiche ;D but it'll be an expensive one
Haha, so good comes from the bad! Brilliant. Everyone gets quiche!
Yeah thats a way of seeing it as well, it all depends if the person does say you can have it for £10 or the next day brings it to your house and says you can have it for what i paid for it so i can go buy something else i actually like - a dozen eggs for example . Thats the difference between a bagger (£10) and a flipper (Eggs) Peace J ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D ;D Nice & simple Bagger = milk Flipper = eggs Between them they could make a quiche ;D but it'll be an expensive one Haha, so good comes from the bad! Brilliant. Everyone gets quiche!
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maxine
New Member
🗨️ 4
👍🏻 0
June 2007
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Flipping Question, by maxine on Jul 9, 2007 13:11:54 GMT 1, Cant eva imagine buying a piece of art and parting with it again till ive really lived with it for a long time and fallen outa love with it...buying art to me is very personal and call me a romantic but i still believe money has nothing to do with art...infact if i paint something really good nothing will get me to sell it untill i have enjoyed it...a good piece of art always grows with me and becomes an emotional part of me...........wot do u think of that you bunch of sterile people....lol....i know im a wannabe hippie
Cant eva imagine buying a piece of art and parting with it again till ive really lived with it for a long time and fallen outa love with it...buying art to me is very personal and call me a romantic but i still believe money has nothing to do with art...infact if i paint something really good nothing will get me to sell it untill i have enjoyed it...a good piece of art always grows with me and becomes an emotional part of me...........wot do u think of that you bunch of sterile people....lol....i know im a wannabe hippie
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RetroCanvas
Artist
New Member
🗨️ 691
👍🏻 18
January 2006
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Flipping Question, by RetroCanvas on Jul 9, 2007 13:24:43 GMT 1, Makes perfect sense to me ,
I mainly paint commissions for people - there is a lot of satisfaction in producing something that originates from the person that will have to look at it for as long as they wish to keep it. Sure, I have my own ideas but producing art for people is a good feeling and promissing from the very start. I'd like to have kept some of the pieces i've done for people in the past then I'd probably have no room to hang them anyway :-)
retro
Cant eva imagine buying a piece of art and parting with it again till ive really lived with it for a long time and fallen outa love with it...buying art to me is very personal and call me a romantic but i still believe money has nothing to do with art...infact if i paint something really good nothing will get me to sell it untill i have enjoyed it...a good piece of art always grows with me and becomes an emotional part of me...........wot do u think of that you bunch of sterile people....lol....i know im a wannabe hippie
Makes perfect sense to me , I mainly paint commissions for people - there is a lot of satisfaction in producing something that originates from the person that will have to look at it for as long as they wish to keep it. Sure, I have my own ideas but producing art for people is a good feeling and promissing from the very start. I'd like to have kept some of the pieces i've done for people in the past then I'd probably have no room to hang them anyway :-) retro Cant eva imagine buying a piece of art and parting with it again till ive really lived with it for a long time and fallen outa love with it...buying art to me is very personal and call me a romantic but i still believe money has nothing to do with art...infact if i paint something really good nothing will get me to sell it untill i have enjoyed it...a good piece of art always grows with me and becomes an emotional part of me...........wot do u think of that you bunch of sterile people....lol....i know im a wannabe hippie
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GD303uk
New Member
🗨️ 601
👍🏻 8
October 2006
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Flipping Question, by GD303uk on Jul 9, 2007 13:28:08 GMT 1, Cant eva imagine buying a piece of art and parting with it again till ive really lived with it for a long time and fallen outa love with it...buying art to me is very personal and call me a romantic but i still believe money has nothing to do with art...infact if i paint something really good nothing will get me to sell it untill i have enjoyed it...a good piece of art always grows with me and becomes an emotional part of me...........wot do u think of that you bunch of sterile people....lol....i know im a wannabe hippie i think i am in love, ;D i agree there is an emotional connection with good art, i feel fond of them and enjoy what they do for me, it is hard to sell a piece sometimes but when your skint and want another piece, we find ourselves trying to quantify which artwork is better or worse than an other. very difficult. lukily with this being so subjective we find ourselves liking and not liking different pictures @ different times. hello lets trade, still isnt easy parting with a piece , and there are one or two pieces i wish i still had,
my mothers name was maxine (couldnt resist , it does look like a chat up ) hehe
respect all GD
post some of your work up
Cant eva imagine buying a piece of art and parting with it again till ive really lived with it for a long time and fallen outa love with it...buying art to me is very personal and call me a romantic but i still believe money has nothing to do with art...infact if i paint something really good nothing will get me to sell it untill i have enjoyed it...a good piece of art always grows with me and becomes an emotional part of me...........wot do u think of that you bunch of sterile people....lol....i know im a wannabe hippie i think i am in love, ;D i agree there is an emotional connection with good art, i feel fond of them and enjoy what they do for me, it is hard to sell a piece sometimes but when your skint and want another piece, we find ourselves trying to quantify which artwork is better or worse than an other. very difficult. lukily with this being so subjective we find ourselves liking and not liking different pictures @ different times. hello lets trade, still isnt easy parting with a piece , and there are one or two pieces i wish i still had, my mothers name was maxine (couldnt resist , it does look like a chat up ) hehe respect all GD post some of your work up
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Flipping Question, by corblimeylimey on Jul 9, 2007 13:46:21 GMT 1, Yes, you definitely become attached to the art, as mentioned before on another thread, I may need to part with my Banksy prints for financial reasons next year, but not before I've scanned them (well the J&J and Grannies) and had reproductions made, as I'd really miss the images, hopefully I'll hardly notice I've lost the originals.
Yes, you definitely become attached to the art, as mentioned before on another thread, I may need to part with my Banksy prints for financial reasons next year, but not before I've scanned them (well the J&J and Grannies) and had reproductions made, as I'd really miss the images, hopefully I'll hardly notice I've lost the originals.
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