Thursday, April 02, 2026

Family Circle Magazine November 23, 1945

 

Family Circle was one of those magazines that seemed like a mainstay during the 20th century. Everyone I knew had a couple of Family Circles in or near the kitchen. I picked a couple of wartime issues up at the Two Brothers used bookstore in Freeport, Maine. These are fun to look at, and while maybe not very heavy on the cartoon side of things, they are packed with illustration and it's like looking at another world. Enjoy!

This is the November 23, 1945 issue and it's copyrighted 1945 by The Family Circle Magazine, Inc.  Child star Margaret O'Brien poses as a cheerful kid pilgrim next to a very ugly turkey. 


These two don't look like a very happy couple.

Dave Huffine draws for Wheaties:

Illustrator Inga Stephens Pratt Clark "(1906–1970) was an American artist and book illustrator, who, with her husband Fletcher Pratt, was at the center of a circle of New York literary figures during the 20th century."



You might want to have some new recipes from 1945:




Jefferson Machamer for Folger's:

Who is that creepy mascot scrubbing and wearing the tartan?


Spooky column header.

Oleomargarine is so creepy looking.


- This has been an edited version of a blog entry that originally appeared on October 5, 2020,

Wednesday, April 01, 2026

Hermann Huppen 1938 - 2026

 

 

Belgian comics creator Hermann passed away on March 22nd. He was 97 years old. He had had a two year battle with cancer.

 


 

 

Lambiek:

 

"Hermann Huppen, who signed with solely his first name, was one of the most popular Belgian artists. He took evening art courses at the Saint-Gilles in Brussels, and started out working as an interior designer, participating in the Expo 58, among other projects. He also worked in Montreal and New York for a short period. It was his brother-in-law Philippe Vandooren (the future editor-in-chief of Spirou) who introduced him to the field of comics. Vandooren assigned him to do a short story for the boy scout magazine Plein-Feu, of which he was the editor at the time. By 1964, Hermann joined the art studios of Michel Greg. During the same period, he illustrated some stories in the series 'Les Belles Histoires de l'Oncle Paul' for Spirou magazine.

"With Greg as his scriptwriter, Hermann broke through with the adventure series 'Bernard Prince' in Tintin in 1966. While continuing this series, he also did some independent stories, as well as the first episodes of the 'Jugurtha' series (written by Jean-Luc Vernal). In 1969, he started on a second series with Greg, the western 'Comanche'. More dramatic and hard-boiled than for instance 'Blueberry' and 'Jerry Spring', 'Comanche' ranks among the best series in the genre. After ten years, Hermann canceled his collaboration with Greg to begin series of his own.

"Hermann's first solo comic was the 'Jeremiah' series, which he initially created for the German publisher Koralle. This grim post-apocalyptic fantasy was an instant hit and remains Hermann's most famous work."

 

Comicsbeat:

"European comics was rocked this past week following the news that Belgian comics auteur Hermann had died March 22, age 87, following a two year battle with cancer. The news went beyond specialised comics outlets, being widely reported in national newspapers across France, Belgium, and beyond. The Brussels Book Fair held a special tribute on March 29, and a ceremony for fans and mourners will take place April 1.

"His former publishers Dupuis and Lombard delivered the news, with Le Lombard saying,

"'It is with pain and sadness that Le Lombard regrets to announce the death of Hermann. A pillar of European comics…Le Lombard extend their heartfelt condolences to Hermann’s family, friends, and loved ones, especially his wife and his son Yves H., who was also his scriptwriter and closest collaborator. More broadly, the world of comics and all lovers of the 9th art have just lost a truly great author.'"




Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Glen Baxter 1944 - 2026




Glen Baxter, whose cartoons were seen in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and other publications, died on March 29, 2026. The cause was carcinomatosis. He was 82.

From The Times:

"A minor surrealist and major seller of greetings cards, the artist Glen Baxter believed that 'drawing is a form of electricity connecting one thing to another, sometimes, and hopefully, in surprising ways.' As such, he long had a strange preoccupation with tweed, one of the many artefacts redolent of Empire that he was to turn to account.

"With his work appearing in The New Yorker, Vanity Fair and the Independent on Sunday, he found a worldwide market from the Eighties onwards for such captioned drawings as two tweedy men tied to posts in front of another: 'There, as usual, was Edelson, delivering his post-structuralist analysis of the modern novel to the privileged few.'

"Elsewhere, on a tennis lawn, the caption apprises the viewer of a fraught situation, for 'Gladys had not realised that Virginia was unable to accept defeat gracefully.' Across the net is a figure now covered in a black mask and sporting an axe. 'Baxter’s drawings are a delicious stew of pulp adventure novels, highbrow high jinks, and outright absurdity: lonesome cowboys confront the latest in modern art, brave men tremble before moussaka, schoolgirls hoard hashish, and the world’s fruits are in constant peril. Wimples abound,' said The New York Review of Books."





Friday, March 27, 2026

Throwing Out Beloved Art Supplies


Going through a large pile of my used Pigma Micron pens. Most are ready to be tossed out, but I have to force myself to do it. A couple date back to 2011 (I write on the pen when I first used it.), so it’s high time I get rid of them. #SpringCleaning

 

 



I do have a separate box full of unused and gently used art supplies that’s bound for DIY Craft and Thrift, a creative reuse store that takes and distributes old art supplies:https://www.diycraftandthrift.com/

Thursday, March 26, 2026

From the Dick Buchanan Files: Captionless Gag Cartoons 1946 - 1968

Dick Buchanan has once more pulled some vintage magazine cartoons from his Greenwich Village flat to share with us. Here are some gag cartoons about clowns, fishing, dogs, William Tell, husbands and wives, magicians, department stores, furniture refinishing, monks, and a wonderful construction cartoon by Peter Porges. They all have one thing in common: no gag line. Thanks, Dick, and take it away:


---


NO-CAPTION VARIETY
GAG CARTOONS
(1946-1968)


Cartoonists themselves are particularly fond of their caption-less cartoon creations. They comprise but 10-15%% of all published cartoons. And they have a special place in the Cartoon Clip File—a simple manila folder with a blank label.

So here is another sampling of cartoons of the no-caption variety. As usual, some require minimal reading, while others require no reading whatsoever. And it’s all in fun . . .

1. TON SMITS. Look Magazine August 5, 1958.


2. JOHN GALLAGHER. The Saturday Evening Post April 17, 1954.



3. NED HILTON. The Saturday Evening Post July 18, 1959. 
4. CLYDE LAMB. The Saturday Evening Post February 11, 1950.



5. VIRGIL (VIP) PARTCH. Liberty Magazine January 1, 1944.


6 VAHAN SHIRVANIAN. The Saturday Evening Post July 18, 1959.



7. CHARLES E, MARTIN (CEM) The Saturday Evening Post June 6, 1962.



8. CHARLES SHARMAN. Collier’s August 12, 1950.

9. HENRY SYVERSON. The Saturday Evening Post December 7, 1946.

10. JACK TIPPIT. The Saturday Evening Post August 28, 1965.



11. WALT WETTERBERG. The Saturday Evening Post January 20, 1951.



12. PAUL PETER PORGES. The Saturday Evening Post July 18, 1959.



13. HENRY MARTIN. 1000 Jokes Magazine September-November, 1968.



14. JOHN ART SMILBY. The Saturday Evening Post November 11, 1947.



15. TON SMITS. Boys’ Life January, 1967.  

 

- This has been an edited version of an original blog entry of May 22, 2019.




Wednesday, March 25, 2026

Alex Toth and Frank Robbins: "Bride of the Falcon" 1972

When it comes to masters of comic book art, Alex Toth and Frank Robbins rank right up there. They keeps getting discovered and rediscovered ... and you can see why. Here's the first 6 pages of their Gothic romance dark thriller moody masterpiece "Bride of the Falcon," from the Sinister House of Secret Love #3, Feb.-Mar. 1972. According to the Grand Comics Database, Doug Wildey inked pages 1 - 11.







 The rest of the story is here

Tuesday, March 24, 2026

Classic Comics Press: Connie Sunday Comic Strips by Frank Godwin

Frank Godwin (1889 - 1959) was an illustrator and a comic strip artist. His comic strip Connie, about an adventurous female reporter and detective, appeared in 1927 and ran until 1944. There have been a few collections of the dailies, but for the first time, Classic Comics Press is working on a series of books collecting his Sunday Connie comics. Here you can really see the painterly inking influence of James Montgomery Flagg. While no firm publication date has been announced, there are rumblings that it may be available before the end of the year. Here are a few cleaned up and colored strips just put up on their Classic Comics Press Facebook page. Gorgeous.