WidowMaker
10-16-2019, 05:08 AM
Hello Everyone,
I'm from South Africa. As a kid, I remember my happiest times being associated with cultural festivals that involved fireworks. I've always been fascinated by them. Now into my ripe old age I'm STILL just as excited by fireworks as I was when I was a kid. The entire process; shopping for them, admiring the packaging, waiting for nightfall and then setting them off... even looked forward to the next day of cleaning up my yard and looking at all the remains...
I'm not a professional pyrotechnics specialist. I've only used commercially available stuff at home. DIY pyrotechnics are not legal in this country either and getting the materials to do it anyway is near impossible.
the golden age of fireworks for me was from 1990 to 2000... I was a kid. I relied on my parents to fund my purchases. The stuff WAS expensive so the budget was limited but it was still so much fun and there was so much excitement... later on in life into my late teens and early 20's life got tough, some years went by with no celebrations.
eventually I entered the Job market, and i was able to afford my own fireworks... I felt a bit dumb because i was a grown adult shopping for things typically marketed to kids, but now I could afford some of these bigger cakes that I would never have dreamed of setting off as a kid in 1995.
I'd like to learn more about the jargon, the technical stuff, as well as look into what it takes to take this up professionally as a side hustle.
I'm from South Africa. As a kid, I remember my happiest times being associated with cultural festivals that involved fireworks. I've always been fascinated by them. Now into my ripe old age I'm STILL just as excited by fireworks as I was when I was a kid. The entire process; shopping for them, admiring the packaging, waiting for nightfall and then setting them off... even looked forward to the next day of cleaning up my yard and looking at all the remains...
I'm not a professional pyrotechnics specialist. I've only used commercially available stuff at home. DIY pyrotechnics are not legal in this country either and getting the materials to do it anyway is near impossible.
the golden age of fireworks for me was from 1990 to 2000... I was a kid. I relied on my parents to fund my purchases. The stuff WAS expensive so the budget was limited but it was still so much fun and there was so much excitement... later on in life into my late teens and early 20's life got tough, some years went by with no celebrations.
eventually I entered the Job market, and i was able to afford my own fireworks... I felt a bit dumb because i was a grown adult shopping for things typically marketed to kids, but now I could afford some of these bigger cakes that I would never have dreamed of setting off as a kid in 1995.
I'd like to learn more about the jargon, the technical stuff, as well as look into what it takes to take this up professionally as a side hustle.