Tuesday Comic Strip Day.
I got to know Michael Vassello online. He ran a Yahoo group about the comic book company Timely/Atlas, where Stan Lee was the editor. HIs enthousiasm inspired me and I got involved as well. After years of online talks and collaborations we met and immediately hit it off. Most of that was his doing, he is just a very sociable people person who is able to connect with lots of people. Still, wherever we looked we found new things in common (besides our age). And this keeps hapening. When I met him this year, I found out that he grows and bottles his own peppers, which happens to be a bobby of mine as well (the growing and consuming, not the bottling). Recently, he started buying Sunday sections from the the New York paper of his youth, this time following in my footsteps because I too had a passion for the New York Sunday. A couple of years ago I even went to the New York Public Library to look at their microfiche files of that paper, when they still had those in a special room on the first floor.
Of course Michael is a bit more thorough and singleminded than I am and his collection of The New York Sunday is already bigger than anything I ever have. He has started a facebook group about it, where he shows his scans. It is called The New York Sunday News Comics History Group and you have to apply for it - and then you can see your timeline fill up with scan after scan, so be prepared.
One of the strips Michael likes and shows a lot it The Ripples by George Clarke. It was best known for the panel version (as Side Glances) that ran in many papers. But in the forties there also was a daily version, which I have also shown from time to time. But with Michael scanning away at the speed he does, most of my samples have become absolete. Certainly the black and white versions I hoarded because of a lack of better material.
Showing posts with label The Ripples. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Ripples. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 25, 2017
Wednesday, November 12, 2014
Real Peachy
Tuesday Comic Strip Day.
Here, along with some of the new Ripples I found, are some of the Aunt Peachy toppers George Clarke did.
Here, along with some of the new Ripples I found, are some of the Aunt Peachy toppers George Clarke did.
Tuesday, November 04, 2014
Odd Job
Tuesday Comic Strip Day.
I have been scanning and cleaning some odds and ends. So here are a couple of George Clark The Ripples and Aunt Peachy Sunday gags that should have gon with an earlier post for which you can follow the label.
I have been scanning and cleaning some odds and ends. So here are a couple of George Clark The Ripples and Aunt Peachy Sunday gags that should have gon with an earlier post for which you can follow the label.
Tuesday, November 05, 2013
The Clarke Effect
I found some more Ripples Sundays by George Clarke which I have added to an earlier post about this charming series by creator of Side Glances. But I am starting with one I found (just now) on my friend Mike Lynch's blog...
Thursday, April 11, 2013
By George!
Tuesday Comic Strip Day.
Earlier this year I showed a classy Sunday strip called The Ripples by daily panelist George Clarke. The best thing you can say about it is probably the worst as well, that his style was extremely cute. In his daily panels that always bothered me, but in the Sundays it seems to have been more at it's place. At least they gave us a chanc to see what a terrific artist he was.
As you can see by 1946, the strip itself had evolved into a more domesticated two tier family strip with a one tier topper about a parrot called Aunt Pechy's Pet Shop. In the paper I am scanning, the two were sometimes seperated.
Tuesday Comic Strip Day.
Earlier this year I showed a classy Sunday strip called The Ripples by daily panelist George Clarke. The best thing you can say about it is probably the worst as well, that his style was extremely cute. In his daily panels that always bothered me, but in the Sundays it seems to have been more at it's place. At least they gave us a chanc to see what a terrific artist he was.
As you can see by 1946, the strip itself had evolved into a more domesticated two tier family strip with a one tier topper about a parrot called Aunt Pechy's Pet Shop. In the paper I am scanning, the two were sometimes seperated.
Saturday, January 05, 2013
All Kidding Aside
Saturday Leftover Day.
Clark started the daily panel strip Side Glances in the twenties. In the late thirties he started The Neighbors and left Side Glances to William Gailbraith - who left it to Gill Fox in the early sixties. In the meantime, Clarke continued The Neighbours until the early seventies on his own. I have never cared for either strip, the humor was to gentle and the style to swirly for me. In the forties Clarke added a Sunday strip to Our Neighbors, called the Ripples. The Sunday strip was dropped in 1948, but as far as I can see it is a lot better than the unadventurous daily.
Saturday Leftover Day.
Clark started the daily panel strip Side Glances in the twenties. In the late thirties he started The Neighbors and left Side Glances to William Gailbraith - who left it to Gill Fox in the early sixties. In the meantime, Clarke continued The Neighbours until the early seventies on his own. I have never cared for either strip, the humor was to gentle and the style to swirly for me. In the forties Clarke added a Sunday strip to Our Neighbors, called the Ripples. The Sunday strip was dropped in 1948, but as far as I can see it is a lot better than the unadventurous daily.
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