Yes! I do! It's tucked in a folder so it won't get mussed up but I love it. I would love one day to see your work printed on glossy high quality card stock--like the press kit upon the sequel's release. Woudn't that be something?
And let me add, I love the travel photos you posted to your photostream. It's a relief to know I'm not the only one who takes pictures of juice boxes, street signs, or all the other shiny things that somehow flies under most people's radar. Trash can on the street of Paris? I'm all over it. A ticket stub found on the floor of a NYC subway car? I'm on it. Cool textured brick or concrete wherever I see it? Like white on rice. The looks I get from passersby can be pretty strange at times, but meh! I'd rather have the picture.
Thanks to the digital revolution in cameras, taking pictures is no longer an agonized decision dictated by the number of exposures you have left on your roll of film. I can take pictures with abandon--well, until the battery wears out on my device. Another thing I love about the digital revolution is the happy fact that the camera lens on my phone is better than the 150-dollar digital camera I carry with me. Of course, I still have that camera because I don't have panorama capability on my phone camera...but the minute it does, I'm retiring the regular camera for good.
Actually, I plan to laser print out all of my postcards onto cardstock in the near future, for Yellowjacket's Paper Prop Package Project. So, since you're participating, you'll get a nice new set of water-resistant postcards, plus some of my paper money and whatever else I can think of between now and then. What do you have planned?
And yeah, I take odd pictures, too. Judging from the rest of Flickr, we are not alone I just got a new phone with a camera, so I imagine I'll be taking a lot more.
Since our local Can't Stop the Serenity event is gearing up, I've been working on more stuff.
Here are two pages of banknote bands for wrapping my two different kinds of currency: the big Bank of the Border Moons notes and my smaller Farmers Bank of LIlac notes.