Xrayist wrote:
The people who dress like they do at shows due it to honor, not pretend to be, the people of the greatest generations this country has ever known.
Thats the best line i've heard all day. Cant say Im much of a reenactor but I have played "dress up" at a few of our local shows in these parts. For the Corsairs over Connecticut 05 show I portrayed a Chance Vought Factory worker alongside my father and a few of my friends.

The outfits are merely a way of trying to convey the time period more accurately and vividly to the average visitor to the show. As I was told by a good friend:
"You have to make it Hollywood". How I interpreted that saying was that, these airshows we all flock to each year are in direct competition with professional sporting events, theme parks, concerts, car racing, gambling, state or town events, etc. The point is that you must make the attendee at the show as entertained and interested as you possibly can. The planes alone do this and do it well, since there the obvious reason people go to airshows in the first place. But with people in period dress, vintage vehicles, etc. it makes it that much easier for the viewer to understand what there looking at, rather than just watching a movie and seeing it. Now there experiencing it, immersing them in it, etc. Along the same lines there are living history villages that portray the 18th and 19th centuries. Heres an example:
http://www.osv.org Are these ridiculous?
Just this past May at the second Corsairs over Connecticut show I had the opportunity to dress as a Marine / Navy Corsair pilot, and I took it.
Photo by Richard AllnutWhile I've never been in the service and technically never earned what I wore, I still felt what I was doing something important. Seeing the aircraft alone is great, but to me having someone in an outfit from the same period as the plane is only an added benefit. Sure I felt like a ham at times while having my picture taken but it seemed anyone who was there only enjoyed the idea of seeing re-enactors. I stayed at the Corsair line almost all day answering the same questions as politely and friendly as possible, but more so being as respectful to whoever I was talking to. I was wearing a uniform that men my age wore in the 40's and 50's that fought and died in. I don't take it light hearted, I don't just think its a fun escape from reality. While I may not be a year round re-enactor, involved in a squad or outfit I still feel like an instrument that helps people understand the time period a little better. I have nothing but the utmost respect for those who have and those who are serving for our armed forces and I never impersonate or pretend to be something Im not. I am who I am, I just might wear an outfit that isn't modern during one of these shows to aid the public in understanding the time frame and answer there questions. Is that so ridiculous and childish?
Sorry for hijacking this thread further.