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Ivan Berryman Art Postcards Aviation Postcards

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Into the Unknown by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Into the Unknown by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Tribute to Giovanni Ancillotto by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Tribute to Giovanni Ancillotto by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Dawn Chorus - Tribute to the men of the 553rd Bomb Squadron, 386th Bomb Group by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Dawn Chorus - Tribute to the men of the 553rd Bomb Squadron, 386th Bomb Group by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:



Ace of Burma - Tribute to Wing Commander Frank Carey by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Ace of Burma - Tribute to Wing Commander Frank Carey by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Raining Fire by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Raining Fire by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Not This Time by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Not This Time by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:



Lloyd C.V by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Lloyd C.V by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Farman F.40 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Farman F.40 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

A Friend in Need by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


A Friend in Need by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:



Photo Reconnaissance Mosquito by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Photo Reconnaissance Mosquito by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Red Danger by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Red Danger by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Typhoons Over Normandy by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Typhoons Over Normandy by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:



A Hand of Aces by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


A Hand of Aces by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Postcard
One edition : £2.20

Quantity:

The Ubiquitous Raider - Dornier Do.17s of 1 Gruppe KG2 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


The Ubiquitous Raider - Dornier Do.17s of 1 Gruppe KG2 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Tribute to Ludwig 'Lutz' Beckmann by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Tribute to Ludwig 'Lutz' Beckmann by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:



Concorde - The Final Touchdown by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Concorde - The Final Touchdown by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Tribute to Oblt Kurt Student by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Tribute to Oblt Kurt Student by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

D-Day Invasion : Tribute to the Glider Troops by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


D-Day Invasion : Tribute to the Glider Troops by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:



Oberleutnant Oskar Freiherr von Boenigk by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Oberleutnant Oskar Freiherr von Boenigk by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Lanoe G Hawker by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Lanoe G Hawker by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 100 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:

Operation Mallard by Ivan Berryman. (PC)


Operation Mallard by Ivan Berryman. (PC)
Collector's Postcard - Restricted Initial Print Run of 40 cards.
One edition : £2.70

Quantity:



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Text for the above items :

Into the Unknown by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Douglas C-47s of the 91st Troop Carrier Squadron, 439th Troop Carrier Group deploy the 101st Airborne Division above the drop zone on the night of 5th/6th June 1944 at the start of Operation Overlord.


Tribute to Giovanni Ancillotto by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Italian Ace Giovanni Ancillotto scored a total of eleven victories during the Great War. This total includes two pioneering night-fighter victories in the summer of 1918. He is best known for his third balloon-busting victory in late 1917, however, during which his Nieuport 11 was severely damaged as he pressed home his attack with rockets, collecting much of the burning balloon with his aircraft. He is shown here during a previous balloon-busting victory with the empty launch tubes of 8 Le Prieur rockets testament to the fate of the enemy balloon. Giovanni Ancillotto was highly decorated and survived the war, but was killed in a car accident in 1924.


Dawn Chorus - Tribute to the men of the 553rd Bomb Squadron, 386th Bomb Group by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Martin B.26 Marauders of the 553rd Bomb Squadron, 386th Bomb Group are depicted approaching the Normandy coast early on 6th June 1944. These aircraft were among the first to bomb the enemy gun emplacements and reinforcements situated along the beaches in order to help clear the way for the Allied landings that were just hours away at the start of Operation Overlord. These B.26s carried out low level bombing sorties over Utah Beach, their low altitude being the key to their high level of success and accuracy. Nearest aircraft is 131576 AN-Z 'Dinah Might' now on display at the Utah Beach Museum.


Ace of Burma - Tribute to Wing Commander Frank Carey by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Having been posted to help relieve the pressure on the Allied forces in Burma, Frank Carey's 135 Sqn found themselves immediately in action against the Japanese. On 29th January 1942, Carey's first victim was the Nakajima Ki.27 'Nate' of Sgt-Maj Nagashima of the 77th Sentai, his aircraft falling close to the RAF airfield at Mingaladon Township, Rangoon. The following month, Carey scored again, claiming three more confirmed Ki.27s, a reconnaissance aircraft, a transport aircraft and another Ki.27.


Raining Fire by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Flying impossibly low en route to the Sorpe Dam on the night of 16th/17th May 1943 as part of Operation Chastise, Flight Sergeant Ken Brown's Lancaster ED918(G) encountered a number of German trains. On three occasions, AJ-F's nose and tail gunners (Sgt D Allaston, front and F/Sgt G S MacDonald, rear) opened fire, pouring shells and hot tracer rounds into the lumbering locomotive and its rolling stock, wreaking havoc along the way. ED918(G) eventually arrived at the Sorpe Dam at 3.00am where it successfully released its Upkeep bomb, but without breaching the dam. Brown and his crew returned safely, their aircraft riddled with holes, perhaps partially due to their route home taking them over the breached Mohne Dam, where they briefly exchanged gunfire with the German batteries there.


Not This Time by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Having arrived at the Eder dam, following the successful breaching of the Mohne on the night of 16th/17th May 1943, Wing Commander Guy Gibson put Flight Lieutenant D J Shannon, flying ED929G, to the task of making the first attack, but he had great difficulty achieving the correct height and approach and had to make a number of abortive runs before finally releasing his Upkeep bomb. AJ-L is shown here making his penultimate pass over the Eder wall, his mine still attached. This dam was eventually breached by Pilot Officer Les Knight, flying ED912(G) whose perfectly placed mine caused a massive breach in the south end of the dam.


Lloyd C.V by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

The Austro-Hungarian Lloyd C.V was a two-seat observation aircraft which was unconventional both in appearance and construction. Its unusually-shaped wings were not fabric covered, but were laminated in plywood for strength and lightness. This innovation, however, caused great problems with maintenance, battle damage repair and structural fatigue caused by moisture building up inside the wing section. Despite its faults, the C.V was a fast and streamlined machine that acquitted itself well during its brief career, 144 of the type being produced by the Lloyd and WKF factories in 1917.


Farman F.40 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Designed the brothers Henri and Maurice Farman, the F.40 embodied many of the features of contemporary designs comprising a crew nacelle with pusher propeller and a tail supported by narrow booms and struts. Forty French squadrons were equipped with the type which first entered service in 1915 but, just one year later, they were being withdrawn as rapid developments in fighter design rendered them obsolete. One such example is shown here having surprised a single-seat Taube observation aircraft, which is spotting above some abandoned trenches near a crashed Albatros C.III. The F.40s prominent position for the gunner / observer was one of its qualities and, it is said, inspired the German AGO company when designing their C.1.


A Friend in Need by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

146 Wing Hawker Typhoons were busy throughout the winter of 1944 / 45, carrying out a wide variety of missions and operations using a combination of rockets and bombs. Here, Wing Commander J R Baldwin OC of 146 Wing escorts a damaged wingman home as they enter the holding pattern to begin finals into their base at Antwerp. Baldwin's aircraft is Mk 1B PD521, carrying his personal markings JBII on the nose.


Photo Reconnaissance Mosquito by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

One of the most versatile British aircraft of the second world war, the Mosquito was employed in many roles during the war, including as seen here, in photo reconnaissance.


Red Danger by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

The Red Baron in one of his Albatross scouts instead of the Fokker DR.1 Triplane with which he is more often associated. History records that no fewer than 56 of his victims fell to the guns of a succession of Albatros scouts, so I have depicted him here flying D.III Nr.2253/17 in which he claimed (among others) victory number 52, his last in this aircraft before taking some long-overdue leave. He went on to become the highest scoring ace of World War 1 with 80 confirmed victories to his credit before his untimely death in April 1918.


Typhoons Over Normandy by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Wing Commander J R Baldwin is depicted flying Typhoon MN934 whilst commanding 146 Wing, 84 Group operating from Needs Oar Point in 1944, en route to a bombing raid on 20th June with other Typhoons of 257 Sqn in which both ends of a railway tunnel full of German supplies were successfully sealed.


A Hand of Aces by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Sopwith Camels of 45 Sqn, Istrana, are shown on an early patrol on a crisp morning in the Winter of 1917-18. B6238 was an aircraft shared by Lts E McN Hand and H M Moody, whilst B6354 was the mount of Lt J C B Firth.


The Ubiquitous Raider - Dornier Do.17s of 1 Gruppe KG2 by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Serving in a huge variety of roles throughout WW2, the Dornier Do.17's origins lay in a design for a high speed mail plane capable of carrying six passengers. Numerous developments saw it mature into one of the world's most iconic bombers, typified here by these three Do.17Z-2s of 1 Gruppe, KG 2, based at Tatoi in Greece during 1941.


Tribute to Ludwig 'Lutz' Beckmann by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Lutz Beckmann joined Jasta 6 in December 1917, transferring to Jasta 48 then Jasta 56 in March 1918 before scoring his first victory. By the end of the war he had scored 8 victories - he is shown here in his colourful Fokker D.VII in September 1918. In World War Two he was awarded the Knight's Cross while commanding a unit flying the Junkers Ju52. He died in 1965.


Concorde - The Final Touchdown by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Shortly after 2.00pm on Friday 24th October 2003, supersonic commercial aviation was brought to a close as three British Airways Concordes touched down within minutes of each other at London's Heathrow Airport for the last time. Here, BA Captain Mike Bannister brings G-BOAG home for the final touchdown.


Tribute to Oblt Kurt Student by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Kurt Student was a pilot before the beginning of World War One and served throughout the conflict, scoring 6 aerial victories. He served with several squadrons including as commander of Jasta 9, and is shown here in his Fokker E.IV. He went on to be a high-ranking officer in the Luftwaffe during World War Two, and was instrumental in creating the German paratroop force. He was later convicted of war crimes associated with the invasion of Crete by his paratroops - he died in 1978.


D-Day Invasion : Tribute to the Glider Troops by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

A tribute to the glider crews and airborne troops who participated in the glider operations during D-Day. The British Horsa glider (known as the flying coffin) was used by British, Canadian and American airborne forces during the invasion. Approximately 100 glider pilots were killed or wounded during the D-Day operations.


Oberleutnant Oskar Freiherr von Boenigk by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Opening his victory tally by shooting down a Sopwith Camel in July 1917, von Boenigk proved himself to be a fine airman and a keen marksman by claiming a further five enemy aircraft by the end of that year. He continued to score steadily until the wars end, being credited with an eventual 26 kills. He went on to serve in the Luftwaffe during World War II, attaining the rank of Major-General, but was taken prisoner by the Russians in 1945 and died in captivity the following year. He is shown here in Pfalz D.III 1936/17 whilst serving with Jasta 4, whose aircraft were immediately recognisable by the black spiral ribbon applied to their fuselages. Von Boenigk is believed to have scored seven of his victories in this machine.


Lanoe G Hawker by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Major Lanoe G Hawkers Bristol Scout C 1611, the No 6 Sqn aircraft in which he shot down two enemy planes on 25th July, 1915, and sufficiently damaged a third enemy aircraft to force it to the ground. He is shown here in combat with an Albatross C.III - soon to fall as one of his victims that day. Lanoe G Hawker earned the first aerial Victoria Cross (VC) of the war for this action, but was killed in November 1916, after a lengthy battle with the infamous Red Baron, Manfred von Richthofen, becoming his 11th victim.


Operation Mallard by Ivan Berryman. (PC)

Halifax Tugs Towing Hamilcar Gliders. Halifax glider tugs of 644 Squadron based at Tarrant Rushton head out across the English Channel with their Hamilcar gliders as part of Operation Overlord in June 1944. The mighty Hamilcar was capable of carrying an 8-ton payload, which was the equivalent of two Tetrarch light tanks, and was used both in the Normandy invasion and at Arnhem.

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