3.X Petition

Dannyalcatraz said:
Still have any faves left over? My collection is smallish, but growing: a Yamaha Classical, a Caddilac Greenburst Ovation Elite tuned C-G-D-A-E-G, a Washburn fretless acc/elec 4str Bass, a Dean 25 Anniversary Caddy 3 humbucker model tuned C-G-D-A-E-G, the Dean EVO Special Select pictured in my Avatar, and 3 Jon Kammerer (http://jonkammererguitars.com/gallery.php) guitars...one prototype "butterbean" 3 single pickup, a walnut accoustic with flamed F-hole, and a blueburst "factory dinged" version of one of these (http://jonkammererguitars.com/detail.php?recordID=77&rowNum=0) tuned C-G-D-A-E-G.

You should see my wish list!
All I have left is my Gibson Les Paul Studio (Black), an Ibanez RG7620 7-String (Vampire Kiss), an old 1955 Gibson acoustic 3/4 size that I don't play - my dad's first guitar, and a crappy $150 generic model classical. I really should get a nice mid-range classical guitar again.

All tuned in the traditional method. I haven't played one tuned with the Guitar Craft method, though Fripp is a genius. How does it play and how does chord structure work?

[/threadjack]
 

log in or register to remove this ad


Whizbang Dustyboots said:
PDF publishers are also a pretty obvious choice, since it's a lot cheaper for them to take a shot at a product than it is for someone doing hard copy. (And if it sells well enough, they can always slap it onto Lulu.)
What's Lulu?


glass.
 

Dannyalcatraz said:
I'll have more money to spend on feeding my G.A.S. (Guitar Acquisition Syndrome).
Ooh, I think I have that too. I just bought a Taylor 314ce, and I am already looking longingly at Strats... :D


glass.
 

glass said:
What's Lulu?


glass.

"Lulu is a marketplace for creators of content, so what you see is actually the product of a community that has grown up around Lulu's electronic publishing technology. We give the creators and owners of digital content complete control over how they use their work. Individuals, companies and groups can use Lulu to publish and sell a variety of digital content including books, music, video, software, calendars, photos and artwork."


-taken from http://www.lulu.com/


I've purchased a couple of print-on-demand books from Lulu and was quite pleased with the results.
 


ivocaliban said:
I've purchased a couple of print-on-demand books from Lulu and was quite pleased with the results.
Likewise. I can see PoD becoming quite the popular thing. Well, I hope so anyway. It's a good idea.
 


cperkins said:
This doesn't hold true for me, as I've been busily collecting 3.X compatible materials to use with future 3.X campaigns (I have zero interest is 4th edition based on the bits of information that have trickled out).

Right now, I am chasing after the few 3.X products that I don't already have.
 

Glyfair said:
Assuming it's a PDF magazine. After listening to discussion from Erik Mona (about Dragon & Dungeon) and Wolfgang Baur (about Kobold Quarterly), anyone who wants to put out a full fledged print magazine is setting themselves up for disappointment more than likely. Anyone who chooses to do it for a sub-market of D&D is just throwing money away.

A PDF magazine, with possibly some print-on-demand type arrangement, on the other hand, might work.

yeah, it would for me.

I have tried products printed on Demand on Lulu, and they were great, cleanly printed and delivered on time.

if it helps the publisher stay afloat, it's fine with me.
 

Pets & Sidekicks

Remove ads

Top