he also paints boardman, as you can see this is a huge seven-foot portrait. it almost looks like boardman is about to step off of the canvas and join us in the room, or you can also get something like james wilson, who moves to not just making the 13 inch globes but he also downsizes so to speak, and this is a three inch globe. this is much cheaper and less information on the globe, but ranged now in a place and at a cost that many more people could afford. so again, you are getting a wider range and hierarchy of different types of products, many that were once imported only, now that are made domestically. even to take you through the whole process with chairmaking, you start out with brass clocks. which have a brass mechanism. brass is imported in the 1780s and 1790s. just like daniel burnap makes. far more expensive these tall clocks. you get eli terry. these connecticut clockmakers start now to make their clocks, but they don't use brass. they use a local material, wood, which is available. it doesn't work as well in a humid new england summer. the wheels