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Did you think Frazetta did only barbarian art?

Splash panel from Happy Fair Tales with art by Frank Frazeta

click the image to see the blog with the scanned pages

While on a Frank Frazetta art hunt (a Google hunt, of course) I found this gem.  I knew FF did a lot of comic art, but never heard about this one.

The scanned pages are over at Pappy’s Golden Age of Comics Blogzine — which is a real find in itself. You’ll just love clicking through the links and finding more good vintage comics.

WADE

TAGS: golden age, comics, comic book, frank frazetta, fairy tales,

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When I decided to teach myself drawing, my first question was, “how will I know if the drawing is good?”

How-to-draw-minnie-mouseThe answer I arrived at was, if it was a good likeness.

I really wasn’t interested in Norman Rockwell-style art.  I loved comics and caricatures (I was raised on MAD Magazine).  So I started doing celebrities and knew that I had a good drawing when anybody (even me) could tell who was pictured.

Disney characters are universally known and fun to draw.  If you’re interested in sharpening your sketching skills, here is a basic tutorial on step-by-step drawing of Minnie Mouse.

Enjoy!

WADE

TAGS: comic, drawing, art, instruction, step-by-step, Disney, Minnie Mouse, cartoon

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“My salesletter’s fundamentals are solid but it seems as if it’s the clueless lover who thinks he’s doing all the right things to give his woman pleasure but in reality… nothing is happening for her.”

 

Writing a sales letter is an art and a science.

The part about the art is the fact that techniques have been developed over the years that are proven successes.

If you aren’t following these techniques, you are just wasting your time … you won’t get results.

The science includes psychology and human behavior.  As much as anybody hates to admit it, we are not that much different than Pavlov’s dogs.  There are ways to make us drool!

Our favorite Note-Taking Nerd — Lewis LaLanne — has lots of material to guide you.  If you spend even a little bit of time learning the basics, you will start to notice a BIG difference in your response rate.

Go sign up for his free reports and reap the benefits of sitting through long seminars and reviewing videos and audio courses — with him doing all the note-taking for you!

WADE

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Click on image to enlarge


This is a 1970 John Stanley ‘s recreation from Marge’s Lulu and Tubby Halloween Fun #6 seen over at Heritage Auctions. Alas! Always short of money…

According to Heritage, it’s “taken from a 1957 Dell comic book cover originally finished by Irving Tripp. Stanley added considerable detail missing from Tripp’s version“. There are substantial differences between them, both in technics and character design. So Tripp’s version has the 1950 children’s book distinctive appearance so often associated to Little Golden Books, whereas Stanley’s freestyle, being much more conventional, does without connections: Witch Hazel’s face has a more wicked expression here -actually, the facial traits reminds me Miss McGargoyle’s, and Tubby’s attitude seems to me more baffling, as if it would contain something’s beyond astonishment…

More Stanley’s original art here.

Original front cover with Irving Tripp art (1957)

Joyville

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By Mike Viola

 

 

There is a base human need to consume.  We gotta eat. We do it with food, we do it with sex, we do it with raising our kids. We do it with movies, music, musicals, paintings, pictures, pictures of musicians in musicals who paint movie posters. The list goes on.  What do we love more than lists? Crossing something off our lists. Consuming our lists.

Let’s walk right past the “I wanna be famous” stage of being an artist. Even though you tell yourself and everybody else around you that you “don’t want to be famous, I just want to be heard.”  You’re kidding yourself.  You’re hungry.  I know very famous people at the top of their game. One guy is the only surviving member of his era. He’s the best. Everyone knows he’s the best. And it’s not enough for him. And that hunger has nothing to do with more fame. He’ll die starving, a very rich man.

Read more on Mike Viola is Lost in the Supermarket…

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Comic panel of Secret Agent X-9 fighting a gang of armed thugs.

Alex Raymond excelled in dynamic action illustration

I immediately fell in love with Alex Raymond’s art when first exposed to it.  As a film noir and detective fiction fan, I discovered that he illustrated a comic strip called Rip Kirby, with the script by Dashiell Hammett (The Maltese Falcon and Thin Man author).

After Raymond’s death, the strip continued with other artists and changed to Secret Agent X-9.

Raymond made his biggest splash as the originator (author and artist) of Flash Gordon.  Awesome stuff and influential to this day.

Here you go — enjoy Alex Raymond.

WADE

 

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Gasoline Alley has been around forever.  It was old when I was a wee lad.  It shows the difference between modern one-shot gag strips today and the leisurely pace of illustration in the early 20th century.

Here is a contribution from Joyville:

WADE

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There!

I’m just getting out from these latest crazy weeks crammed with work (of that kind one has to do to live decently), particular obsessions (what would Life be without them?) and a lightning visit to Paris (where I had the pleasure to meet nice and very talented women: Mathyld, Lili Scratchy, Chamo, Delphine Durand: thanks so much for sharing with us a piece of your time).

Luckily, a comic lover always get any time to taste the fruits of the noble art of cartooning. As for me, I gave it completely to reread Frank King’s Gasoline Alley (a little part of King’s vast volume of work, of course). And it worked like a motherly hug, as it couldn’t be any other way!

To tell the truth, the strip was practically a mystery to me before D+Q decided to reprint it. Yes, I had seen before some scraps here and there, but naturally nothing to draw my own conclusions. So here goes my deeply thanks to Jet Heer, Chris Oliveros and Chris Ware, the editors of this gem, because Gratitude is the sign of noble souls.

Otherwise, one can’t help feeling a lively sensation of being a witness to a medium establishing its form and conventions while reading Gasoline Alley nowadays. Frank King amongst other masters had the privilege (and cleverness) to lay comics foundations in order to Cartooning was regarded as a real mass medium: an art with its own, not transferable language.

Comic is necessary elliptical, a “space” where the reader has to fill up the gaps, and so panels (and the gutter between them) turn into the most significant tools in comics. And I was surprised how was King conscious about this matter. Look these comic strips from the early years:

Read more on Gasoline Alley — A Timeless Place…

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Victorian illustration of man in a bathtubSo, you like comic strips? You like ’em retro? You like Steam Punk. You like absurd and just plain crazy?

I stumbled across Wondermark, by David Malki, a stupendous effort of gas-lamp era weirdness with a suspicious trace of LSD. The art is impeccable — perhaps scanned etchings of Victorian England, and the sense of humor works on so many levels.

“The Revolution Will Not Be Telegraphed!”

All very proper and tidy, y’know.

Check it out and be prepared to spend a little time there.

WADE

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I never really related to teen comics when I was a teen.  It seems most of them were rooted in the 50s — if not the 40s.
I had a serious comic book habit.  I carried The Norton Daily Telegram route every day after school, starting in about 2nd grade (my older brother had the route and I inherited it a few years later when he got involved in Jr. High sports after school).
Likewise, my younger brother started going around the route with me when he was pretty young and took it over when I reached Jr. High.  It was a real family tradition.
After I picked up the papers and tucked them in my bag, Iwould stop by Compaan’s Rexall drug store and pick up my comic of the day.  They were a dime when I started, then went to 12 cents and then 15 cents over the next few years.  Whew — I was given a lesson in inflation at an early age.  But I was earning paper route money, so I could afford it.
I walked my route, throwing or dropping off papers while reading a comic (or MAD magazine, but that’s another post).
Among those was Archie — as I’ve mentioned, not exactly my favorite book.
I wasn’t aware of Tippy Teen until just recently and found myself admiring the art.
So now I’m gonna share with you …. this ought to blast you back to the Malt Shoppe days. (After the Jump)
WADE

Read more on Schwartz in Fashion: The Tippy Teen Years…

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