Just a lovely bit of clean line drawing.īo Brown with a good dowagers-in-a-meeting gag. I thought that Stan Hunt's gag was maybe a bit shopworn, but look at his lines: even the individual plates and casually placed utensils are shown. We looked at dozens and dozens of houses before buying one this past summer. I would agree with my Italian cartoonist colleague if only he would stop making fun of the Irish!Īn early Henry Boltinoff cartoon. Related: My friend Roy Delgado bemoans the lack of good cannibal cartoons in today's market. The TV is more important than the traditional roles of family! This cartoon would sell today.Ībove is one of the top cartoon cliches, and I'll be darned if Clyde Lamb didn't come up with a new and funny take on the idea. The one and only Mort Walker shows us an early women's rights cartoon. Lem Grier with a wordless and universal cartoon that's less about fishing and more about crummy human nature. I like the economy of the bicycle wheel spokes. The time's are a-changin'.Įven in the early years of his MARMADUKE newspaper panel, Brad Anderson was contributing to the gag cartoon market. Aside: I was in Pittsburgh over the weekend and was surprised that people can still smoke in restaurants there. Look at how adeptly Wyma shows those toes through the split shoes.Ĭlyde Lamb draws a snappy cartoon line here. Pete Wyma shows us that you can take the husband out of the tavern, but you can't take the tavern out of the husband. I've recently seen his work in The Funny Times. Joe is still cartooning, still working in the NYC area. The boy's effective expression telegraphs all that we need to know - and seals the gag. What struck me as odd is that these 2 fellows have the same hair and mustache - something I didn't notice until maybe the third time I looked at it.Īn early Joe Farris cartoon. The doctor's office is suggested by a cabinet, one bottle with a medical cross on it, and a half-hidden stethoscope. The black pants draw our eye to the whole point of the gag. Nickles employs a Syverson-drawn little guy to point at YOU!įred Levinson draws a subtly masterful cartoon. Dutton and Company, Inc.Ībove: the dedication. Here is a small sampler from a collection of Saturday Evening Post cartoons culled from HONEY I'M HOME!, a Bantam Books paperback edited by Marione R. I don't know what those blue shapes are, but they pretty much get in the way of the graphic to today's design sensibilities. Join 271 other subscribers Follow Oddbox Comics on WordPress.Above: Frank O'Neal draws a sit-com-like gag for the cover of HONEY I'M HOME. Hey…I gotta eat, too! Oddbox Carousel Gallery (click on lower part of strip) Tips (just click on the flashing chupacabra and type in the amount you would like to contribute). Tags alien animation Art artist Baseball Baseball card bee birds Bird Smirk birthday gift brain butterfly CafePress caricature cartoon cat chess Chico and the Chupacabra Christmas Chupacabra Color color pencils Comic Art Comic Art by Gonzalez comic book comic panel Comics comic strip cover art Creating deer design ditty dog Donald Trump Doopy Joe drawing evolution fairy fish Fiverr Flint Comix Flint River gag cartoon game genetic engineering Gifts goat Interesting Comments kayak leprechaun logo moon mouse mural muse mutton notepads obscure Oddbox painting Patreon pencil sketch pet caricature pet drawing pet portrait pets philosophy Photoshop pig pot of gold prehistoric rabbit rainbow rat Robin Hood Santa Claus scratch pad ScribblePad security sketch Small Consolation Small Consolation by Bob Gonzalez sneeze Sports Stoopid! Stoopid! Magazine super-hero Surewould Forest T-shirt design Television The Anonymous The Sports Page tiny drawings trees True or Hoowie Watercolor painting we buy gold writing YouTube Zimmer-Man Zimmerman Zinger-Man Click on the image below to visit Chico and the Chupacabra. Click the pic Go here to buy Oddbox Comics Merchandise.
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