Hi Alan, In giving it another name, as long as you are not intending to deceive anyone, by insinuating, it is quality name, you should safely, be able to call it anything you want. It will be purchased not for its name, but for how the customer likes it. I wish there were a grammar checker, as well as a spell checker. Do you see the length of that first sentence. :-) Regards, John M. Ross Windsor, Nova Scotia. jrpiano@win.eastlink.ca ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alan R. Barnard" <mathstar@salemnet.com> To: <pianotech@ptg.org> Sent: Saturday, August 10, 2002 5:53 PM Subject: Re: a rose by any other name... | It's a genuine Squeak & Rattle | | AB | ----- Original Message ----- | From: "Ron Nossaman" <RNossaman@cox.net> | To: <pianotech@ptg.org> | Sent: Saturday, August 10, 2002 9:48 AM | Subject: Re: a rose by any other name... | | | > | > >I'm afraid it will be difficult to sell a piano with no name. ("What | kind of | > >piano is it?" "Well, I don't really know.") Would it be too | disreputable, or | > >deceptive, to slap a decal on the fallboard? (Kind of a homemade stencil | > >piano.) Maybe I could call it a "Pineway"! (Spelled Peinway, of course.) | > >Seriously, I'm thinking more along the lines of "Jacob & Sons", or | something | > >venerable like that. | > | > | > Mirage & Sons. | > | > Ron N | > |
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