The Fabuleous Fifties blog has posted some nice looking Felix scans. Click the page for more!
B. Stone
The Fabuleous Fifties blog has posted some nice looking Felix scans. Click the page for more!
B. Stone
The second volume of the funny animal comic book, Funny Aminals, will be released on Oct. 31st, 2010. The book will feature comics from some killer cartoonists, more details soon!
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New funny aminals are scurrying around on Cartoon Network. Check out their great new show called Regular Show. Click the image for more.
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Domo is the official mascot of NHK also known as the Japan Broadcasting Corporation.
If you like Domo you should check out Tsuneo Gōda’s other project, Komaneko: The Curious Cat!
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Here are a few clips from the Phoenix cartoon. I’ve not seen it but it looks pretty good. Unlike the Americanized Astro Boy movie this one is drawn with respect paid to Tezuka’s style. Most of this clip looks like it comies from the story Karma.
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An excerpt from Phoenix, volume 6: Nostalgia
From Phoenix, Volume 7: Civil War (part one):
From Tezuka in English . com:
“…Among the 12 volumes (of Phoenix) are some of Tezuka’s most inspired, most experimental and most intimate stories. Each story is complete in itself, all taking place at different time periods. The settings alternate, beginning in the ancient past, with vol. 2 taking place in the distant future, vol. 3 in the less ancient past, vol. 4 in the less distant future, drawing ever closer to the present….”
For more about Tezuka’s Phoenix click here.
Scanlations are great for manga that’s not yet available in English but for a work like Phoenix please try to find the books, it makes for a better reading experience and it assures the future of quality print translations. The Phoenix books were translated and published by Viz. Visit their site by clicking here. It’s O.K. to spend your money on comics, they’re worth it!
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In the above clip and, as far as I know, in all the cartoons Sonic is voiced by Jaleel “Don’t call me Urkel” White.
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I scanned the following illustrations by Richard Floethe from a 1937 “Heritage Illustrated Bookshelf” edition of Pinocchio. It’s a beautiful clothbound, slightly oversize, book that I found at a book sale.
The ghost image you see here is from the illustration on the page facing the text. I got it by messing with the levels in Photoshop.
From the artist’s website:
Richard Floethe — (1901 – 1988) was a prolific artist of considerable stature. He was born in Essen, Germany and received his art training at the Munich State School, the Dartmund Art School, and at the Bauhaus in Weimar. While at the Bauhaus, he studied design with Paul Klee and color theory and composition with Wassily Kandinsky. He came to the United States in 1928.
Click the Girl in Red to visit Floethe’s site. There are several galleries spanning his career which lasted almost until his death in 1988.
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Below are a few funny animal drawings spanning Arthur Rackham’s career.
From Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland, Lewis Carroll, 1907:
From A Midsummer Night’s Dream: With Illustrations by Arthur Rackham, William Shakespeare, 1908
From Aesop’s Fables, William Heineman, Ltd., 1912
From Mother Goose: The Old Nursery Rhymes, Arthur Rackham, 1913
From The Wind in the Willows, Kenneth Grahame, 1940
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