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1966 Ford Country Squire Station Wagon 4 dr. resin trans kit 1/25th Galaxie

$ 60.72

Availability: 100 in stock
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Condition: New

    Description

    Last one till late August
    Here's a kit of the 1966 Ford Country Squire station wagon in 1/25th scale.
    This kit has been mastered by myself, not a copy of another artists work. Included is a cleanly cast, accurate body. Interior tub with separate seats. Flat stock clear plastic for the quarter window glass. Plated front and rear bumpers. Plated taillights.  Peel and stick wood grain decals.
    Trimming of the donor kits chassis rear wheel housings will be necessary to clear the rear interior tub of the wagon.
    Builds using an AMT 66 Galaxie 500 XL kit as a donor kit. The last  photo is of 2 built versions of this kit. Those are to show how they look built and are not included in the auction.
    These kits are for the experienced modeler
    familiar with working with resin kits. 10.00 shipping inside the USA.
    My resin kits are listed every second Sunday at 6:00 PM Pacific time. New kits coming soon!.
    An Important note:  I hate to have to post this, but in these times we live in it is necessary.
    Unfortunately there are resin casters out there who steal others work and put their name on it and sell it as their own product. I work many hours to create the masters for my kits and intend to legally protect them as my own.
    The following is only directed to the potential copiers of my work.
    Q.
    When I sell my work, does the buyer have the right to copy it or take and sell photos or prints of it?
    A.
    No. Selling a painting, sculpture, or other artwork is a sale of the object only. The sale does not convey copyrights, unless you specifically agree to do that. This means the person who buys your work has no right to make copies of your work or even to adapt it into another form. For example, the buyer of a painting cannot photograph your work or make posters of it and sell the photos or the posters. The buyer of a sculpture cannot copy it to make molded versions of the sculpture, whether they be simulations or plastic, miniaturized versions of the sculpture. Only you as owner and author of the copyrights can do that. You do not need a contract with the buyers to retain these rights. And if you find that one of your buyers has reproduced or adapted your work without your permission, you are entitled to sue him or her for copyright infringement.
    Anastasia P. Winslow is an intellectual property attorney in Princeton, NJ, where she practices patent and copyright law. She also is an adjunct professor of copyright and patent law at Seton Hall University School of Law in Newark, NJ.