Truth about cartoons



In 1513 art of this nature began with Italian Botechelli and Perugini of the early Renaissance. In 1515 Rapheal was commissioned to make tapestry in a church in the bottom part of the church. This was woven and it is here we can first classify the first cartoons. The art of the tapestry however began by theFlanders in Flemish area of Holland. Following in Rapheal’s footsteps Micheal Angelo also got on to the new form of art being commissioned by the oligopoly of the church. He got to do something in the Cistern chapel in 1516. His work had many fans for the next one hundred years. By this time in the 1600’s the specialists of tapestry weaving the dutch cottoned on the cartoons were cool.But it was in the dutch part of Belgium that cartoons at this time began to manifest by a bloke called Pieter van Aelst. Some of the monarchs of this period real took a fancy to these cartoon tapestries that were being reeled out from this region, which were also probably big fans of Micheal Angelo, because people still are today as indeed Botechelli and the likes. O.K so who were the monarchs who commissioned these early stages of awesome art? Well the monarchs were Henry VIII  and Charles 1. Now they had the dough so the tapestries had to go at such a modest price that everybody would soon respect the cartoon image albeit a tapestry pixel. Even today Flemish artist Peyo from Belgium from the 1970’s created The Smurfs. I liked the smurf’s and used to collect Smurf’s, Smurf’s were cool in the seventies. These collections of tapestry not long after this moment in time, were attempted to-be removed by Paris aristocracies but failed in their attempts to buy out the Royal jewels. That is partly why the tapestries survived so well, and that folks can tell this story, because these tapestries were stored in the dungeons of London. In London today cartoon images are very popular with tourists. For example fridge magnets are cool and cheap sometimes only costing a quid. Some of the most famous of these cartoon fridge magnets are Beef Eaters (like you see on a bottle of vodka) and the post box, plus the hop on and of Leyland buses. Some other toys that go down well are the toy-cast cars, taxi cabs and cartoon pencils, huge pencils with frilly straps and big pink rubbers on top embossed with gold coloured copper seals.

Yeah cartoons are popular with the tourists.In-fact as you’ll notice in London and in parts of Paris you’ll see cartoonists tooting there craft in the busiest tourist routes. Other popular places for cartoons outside of your regular bundled subscription of cartoon magazines, is well read magazines such as Readers digest. In-fact most of the art from this blog are a collection of the more salubriously accepted copies of Readers Digests favourite artist.

I have recently started to subscribe to Readers Digest it’s actually quite a good read, and if you subscribe it works out a lot cheaper than what it would be if you purchased it in the shops. If you are looking for the tapestries in London that I mentioned above get yourself down to the South Kensington museum.

They also have some good books on sale.Cartoons today have several meaning meanings, including creative visual work for print media, for electronic media, and even animated films and animate digital media, which comes in comic strip format and speech bubbles or balloons of words.

You can make your own cartoon strips if you go to pixels.com. This kind of cartoon mixed with the early politics of old London town became known as satyre.

However much of this form of humour was drawn from the early puppeteers who performed Punch and Judy shows.

Some other famous cartoonists are Robert Crumb, Ed Brubaker, Tom Bunk Heinrick Klay, Joost Swarte a dutch cartoonist and of course.

In 1906 the first animated cartoon was made in Britain by a boy who’s name was J Stuart Blackthorn. By 1923 Snow white came out in colour, before this Mickey Mouse also from Disney had been popular in-between silent movies at the cinema.

Music accompanied the shows. Some other popular feature films by Disney have been where where cartoons were mixed with real actors the first one that springs to mind is Puff the Magic Dragon and that one with Bob Hoskins, hmm can’t remember the name of that one.

Danger Mouse was cool, and like most good British cartoons the theme tunes were a very important part of build up to the excitement that sprang from watching moving cartoons. My favourite thing though now about cartoons is having a cartoon profile, at the moment I have a Simpsonized version of me when I had a lighter coloured hair. Little do you know though my hair is now brown again. Some other popular cartoons today outside of yesterday’s Danger mouse Road Runner and Elma Thudd are Simpsons The family guy and hmm Marvel cartoons like Hulk, Spiderman and Fantastic Four.

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