Monday Cartoon Day.
Some time ago I posted an article from a 1946 Ford Times magazine about Dik Browne, wich featured some of his cartoons and hinted to the fact that he was one of their regular contributors. Recently someone on Ebay was selling a lot of 1945/46 Ford Times issues, but sadly only two of them had Browne in them. On the other hand, it's two more from the earliest part of one of the best and funniest cartoonists of the fifties (ad sixties and seventies and eighties...). I wonder if he kept any of his work and if his family has something left...
Showing posts with label Ford Times. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ford Times. Show all posts
Tuesday, May 05, 2015
Saturday, September 22, 2012
Power Presentation
Saturday Leftover Day.
This week I ran across another color sample of the Roger Wilco series of ads for Powrhouse Candy Bars that Dik Browne produced for comic strip advertising agency Johnstone and Cushing in 1946 to 1948. I wnt back to NewspaperArchive to see if I could find some more and added those to the ones I have shown earlier. Since some ads were reused by different papers, sometimes a year later and since not all papers that did carry them used them on the same date, I cannot tell if I have found all of them. But so far it looks as if Browne did one a month for more than two years, it looks as if I am still short a few. After that I also repost a bit about a one tier daily version that does not seem to have been drawn by Browne, which suggests the design is not by him - which is od, because it suits his syle at that time. After that some more ads Browne did from 1946.
The Sunday Powerhouse ads may be the only work Dik Browne ever signed while he was at Johnstone and Cushing (follow the tag for more samples). But he didn't sign all of them. And since the campaign ran over a period of three years (I have samples from 1945 and 1948) it is not clear if Browne originated Roger Wilco or if he just inherited it. Still, there is a continuence of style, whic would make it possible for him to have done them all.
Jan 4 1946, A Seaside Saga:

March 3 1946, His Trusty Motorcycle:

May 12 1946, "Native Stew":

July 17 1946, A Streamlined Saga:
Srpt 1 1946, His Handle-Bar Adventure:

Nov 3 1946, A Sooty Saga:

April 6 1947, A Flaming Adventure:
July 27 1947, Gives A Cleaner The Brush Off!:

Augustus 24, 1947, In A Film Thriller:
October 5 1947
November 6, The Big Push:
November 20 1947, In A Jingle Jungle:
Dec 21 1947, A Sooty Saga (again):

Jan 6 1946, In The Wild And Wooly West:

Feb 3 1946, "Snake Charmer":

March 2 1947, Always Right On Deck:

May 4 1947, The Bump On A Log:

June 1 1947, Calls The Tune:

May 2 1948, A Vulcanic Adventure:
May 16 1948, In The Sunny South:

June 6 1948, In A Springtime Adventure:
Apart from the Sunday series, there were also daily chapters (at least in 1945). They are from the same time period, but again it is not certain f Browne was involved. But it does look like the style of the man who had just desgned the Chiquita Banana Lady. I have added the two I showed earlier. In a later post, I suggest the possibillity that Roland Coe might have been involved, sice he had a similar style. But then again, this style is the same Browne used for his Chiquita Lady logo design and some of his earliers cartoons for the Ford Magazine. I have added labels for all of these, if you want to see more.
Nov 26 1945:

Dec 6 1945:

Dec 10 1945:

Dec 17 1945:

Dec 27 1945
:

In 1946 Browne did another series in a similar style, Captain Mint. They appeared in 1946 and the syle is very similar to the Roger Wilco ads, also from 1946. Colonel Mint is not signed, but Roger Wilco sometimes was (as you can see in the provided sample). Compare for yourselves. But Browne or not, thye are fun.
The tabloid versions are from a sunday magazine. In two cases I have added the two tier version as well, so you can see for yourselves how the conversion was made.








This week I ran across another color sample of the Roger Wilco series of ads for Powrhouse Candy Bars that Dik Browne produced for comic strip advertising agency Johnstone and Cushing in 1946 to 1948. I wnt back to NewspaperArchive to see if I could find some more and added those to the ones I have shown earlier. Since some ads were reused by different papers, sometimes a year later and since not all papers that did carry them used them on the same date, I cannot tell if I have found all of them. But so far it looks as if Browne did one a month for more than two years, it looks as if I am still short a few. After that I also repost a bit about a one tier daily version that does not seem to have been drawn by Browne, which suggests the design is not by him - which is od, because it suits his syle at that time. After that some more ads Browne did from 1946.
The Sunday Powerhouse ads may be the only work Dik Browne ever signed while he was at Johnstone and Cushing (follow the tag for more samples). But he didn't sign all of them. And since the campaign ran over a period of three years (I have samples from 1945 and 1948) it is not clear if Browne originated Roger Wilco or if he just inherited it. Still, there is a continuence of style, whic would make it possible for him to have done them all.
Jan 4 1946, A Seaside Saga:
March 3 1946, His Trusty Motorcycle:
May 12 1946, "Native Stew":
July 17 1946, A Streamlined Saga:
Srpt 1 1946, His Handle-Bar Adventure:
Nov 3 1946, A Sooty Saga:
April 6 1947, A Flaming Adventure:
July 27 1947, Gives A Cleaner The Brush Off!:
Augustus 24, 1947, In A Film Thriller:
October 5 1947
November 6, The Big Push:
November 20 1947, In A Jingle Jungle:
Dec 21 1947, A Sooty Saga (again):
Jan 6 1946, In The Wild And Wooly West:
Feb 3 1946, "Snake Charmer":
March 2 1947, Always Right On Deck:
May 4 1947, The Bump On A Log:
June 1 1947, Calls The Tune:
May 2 1948, A Vulcanic Adventure:
May 16 1948, In The Sunny South:
June 6 1948, In A Springtime Adventure:
Apart from the Sunday series, there were also daily chapters (at least in 1945). They are from the same time period, but again it is not certain f Browne was involved. But it does look like the style of the man who had just desgned the Chiquita Banana Lady. I have added the two I showed earlier. In a later post, I suggest the possibillity that Roland Coe might have been involved, sice he had a similar style. But then again, this style is the same Browne used for his Chiquita Lady logo design and some of his earliers cartoons for the Ford Magazine. I have added labels for all of these, if you want to see more.
Nov 26 1945:
Dec 6 1945:
Dec 10 1945:
Dec 17 1945:
Dec 27 1945
In 1946 Browne did another series in a similar style, Captain Mint. They appeared in 1946 and the syle is very similar to the Roger Wilco ads, also from 1946. Colonel Mint is not signed, but Roger Wilco sometimes was (as you can see in the provided sample). Compare for yourselves. But Browne or not, thye are fun.
The tabloid versions are from a sunday magazine. In two cases I have added the two tier version as well, so you can see for yourselves how the conversion was made.
Labels:
Dik Browne,
Ford Times,
Powerhouse,
Roger Wilco,
Roland Coe
Monday, February 08, 2010
Dikkin' Around
Monday Cartoon Day.
We all know and love Dik Browne as the overseized viking with the unkept beard he used as a model for his succesful solo strip Hagar. But he didn't always look like that. Kicking off a week of Dik Browne posts, we start with a unique interview he did for the december 1846 issue of the sponsored magazine The Ford Times (complete with selfportrait).Apparently he did cartoons for this magazine, which has immediately risen to the top of my list of obscure magazines to look out for. I have added the cover of this digest sized magazine, which is not by Browne by the way.


Monday Cartoon Day.
We all know and love Dik Browne as the overseized viking with the unkept beard he used as a model for his succesful solo strip Hagar. But he didn't always look like that. Kicking off a week of Dik Browne posts, we start with a unique interview he did for the december 1846 issue of the sponsored magazine The Ford Times (complete with selfportrait).Apparently he did cartoons for this magazine, which has immediately risen to the top of my list of obscure magazines to look out for. I have added the cover of this digest sized magazine, which is not by Browne by the way.
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