Showing posts with label arts and crafts. Show all posts
Showing posts with label arts and crafts. Show all posts

Friday, December 27, 2013

Countdown to New Year: Day 1


Arts and Craters, Do It Yourselfers and paper doll enthusiasts can get ready for the New Year by assembling this vintage animated paper doll set of Father Time unpacking the baby New Year!

From Child Life (December 1928). Art by Dukes McKee. 

Wednesday, August 07, 2013

Papercraft: Explore the Spaceways!

From Science Comics #7 (August 1940) is this 2-page text story about space exploration and claiming a moon of Jupiter in the name of the United States and the One World Government. A few pages of text were often added to comic books in order to qualify for a less expensive postal rate and on occasion were interesting and worth a read. DC Comics was the master of this practice in the late 1950s and through the 1960s with their educational features and "Flash Facts".


This Golden Age feature is noteworthy if not for the expansionist creed then the arts and crafts page that is featured earlier in the book. Readers can build their own papercraft rocket ship that is representative of that throughout the different drawn tales in this issue including the text story! Readers can explore the galaxy for themselves! Pretty keen and gorgeously retro to today's sensibilities.  

Unfortunately while the story is credited to Fox Comics house author Nathaniel Nitkin (a.k.a. N. N. Nathaniel) the text and rocket art could be from any or none of the illustrators who worked on the book itself. The perceived disposable nature of work-for-hire pop entertainment was one of many factors that had the sad result of creators not being properly credited for years. A practice that stretched from the beginning of the pulps that persists in many formats to present day.



Any papercrafters that make their own rocket and send me a link I'll post your work. By the way, the instructions don't say you have to make rocket motor noises when playing with your finished model but, come on, don't pretend you won't.

Show your work.

Monday, August 05, 2013

Friday, March 22, 2013

Fan-Designed Fashions For Patsy Walker Paper Doll

Paper Doll feature from Patsy and Hedy #51 (Mar 1957)

Patsy Walker is a Golden Age teen humor and romance comic book Marvel Comics character that first appeared in magazines in the mid-1940s. Patsy later made a Silver Age appearance long after she was retired as a character and was later revived as the super-heroine Hellcat in 1976.

Art by this gang I assume: Pencils: Al Hartley, Inks: Al Hartley, Colors: Stan Goldberg, Letters: Artie Simek. Might be some Colletta in there but I can't say for sure as there is no issue info on who created this.

BONUS! Mix-and-Match Bunty's Electronic Brain of Atomic Death for more paper doll fun!

Show your work.

Sunday, January 01, 2012

Happy New Year 2012

Click to make humungous, print and put it together to usher in 2012!

From Child Life (January 1928).

Thursday, June 02, 2011

Sue the Magic Mannikin paperdoll

Show your work.
Sue the Magic Manikin Paperdoll (1957)
Click to make Real Girl-sized!

From The Woodland Adventures of Sue the Magic Manikin (Sacony Fashions, 1957)

Friday, December 24, 2010

Snow Scooter is light and swift

Snow Scooter (1955)

I'd be hard-pressed to find anyone alive today who could make this. My Grandpa could have knocked one of these out for the kids in an afternoon, though. From the Do-It-Yourself Encyclopedia (1955).

Thursday, July 22, 2010

Archie, That's My Skull

Archie's Madhouse #5 (June 1960)
Brace yourself, then click the picture.

From Archie's Mad House #5 (July 1960).

Thursday, November 05, 2009

Card #42

Show your work.

Kodansha Lace Knitting Cards #42 (v2, 1963).

Tuesday, October 06, 2009

Petite Mort




From Inside Detective magazine (July 1947).

Click each picture to make them easier to view as full-sized 8-by-10 color glossy pictures with the circles and arrows and a paragraph on the back of each one explaining how each one was to be used as evidence.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Lord of the Diorama

Show your work.

Click to make mighty like Tantor!

From the tabloid-sized DC Limited Collector's Edition C-22 (1973).

Thursday, July 16, 2009

Arts & Crafts

Show your work.

DC Limited Collectors' Edition #C-45(1976)