Animator Eric Larson uses two puppies as reference while he sketches scenes for Walt Disney's "One Hundred and One Dalmatians". 1960
Panels of comic strip TEENA, by Hilda Terry (1914-2006). Terry was the first woman allowed to join the National Cartoonists Society.
So well-drawn: so lean and economical, elegant. The actions and emotions of the loose-limbed teens populating the comic are always clear and bright, their poses free from the stiff clichés usually seen in teen comics. These examples are all from the 1950s.
JC Leyendecker
title unknown, 1922
Matchbox cover
Source Flickr: @patricia m
‘Patsy Pinup’
‘Jumbo Comics’ (Dec, 1946)
Really Cool and Interesting Comic Panels by French Cartoonist Alain Saint-Ogan from the 1920’s I’m in love with this cityscape he’s drawn! I’ve heard this artist was a big influence on Herge(creator of Tin Tin) which makes sense I can see how the styles blend over.
Sheet music, Let Us Waltz As We Say Goodbye, Harold Rossiter Music Co., 1925
"In the Arms of the Arctic Ocean. An Essay from the Life of Fishermen" by Pyotr Dobry, cover art by E. Lvov (1924)
Great Panel by Cartoonist H.M Bateman probably one of the best ever British cartoonist what I like in this one is how the man’s rage is represented in this grotesque abstract blob of anger and how the whole world seems to bend to his frustration in the background.Not to mention the great poses and facial expressions.
Animated TV commercials from the 1950s and 1960s (with an emphasis on licensed cartoon characters).