Sunday Toth Triumph.
Continuing my run of Alex Toth's Sierra Smith stories from DC's Dale Evans Comics. There is a link to yesterday's Casey Ruggles post. In the early fifties Alex Toth also did a well remembered and even reprinted run as a ghost artist on Warren Tufts' daily strip.
Showing posts with label Casey Ruggles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Casey Ruggles. Show all posts
Sunday, October 21, 2018
Saturday, October 20, 2018
The Mild Mild West
Saturday Story Strip Day.
Regular visitors to my blog will know, that I am a sucker for the unknown and the obscure. That doesn not mean I don't like the big succesful comics or strips. I like Warren Tufts' strips Casey Ruggles and Lance and will buy both collections coming from Classic Comic Press. But I won't show them here, because of that same reason. If you like it as well, you can go and buy the book (And while you are there, look for their other great books as well: https://www.classiccomicspress.com/products/lance). Recently, I sold a lot of newspaper sections with Casey Ruggles in them, but what I scanned weren't those pages, but the few I had from 1955, when Tufts had left the strip and the syndicate continued it with another artist. Wikipedia says it's Al Carreno, but I am not familiar with his work enough to say if he did these. Not as good as those done by Tufts by a long shot, but I guess you have never seen them anywhere. With that I have an earlier ghosted Sunday, from a half year period in 1953 when Tufts didn't do Casey Ruggles. The best guess seems to be Al Plastino, but I have to confess to seeing some Bob Powell in there as well. Then again, maybe not enough to say it is by Powell (who had a very distinct style). Little else to add, except maybe that the sections with Tufts sold out immediately. The ones with these strips (and Tarzan on the back) did not.
Regular visitors to my blog will know, that I am a sucker for the unknown and the obscure. That doesn not mean I don't like the big succesful comics or strips. I like Warren Tufts' strips Casey Ruggles and Lance and will buy both collections coming from Classic Comic Press. But I won't show them here, because of that same reason. If you like it as well, you can go and buy the book (And while you are there, look for their other great books as well: https://www.classiccomicspress.com/products/lance). Recently, I sold a lot of newspaper sections with Casey Ruggles in them, but what I scanned weren't those pages, but the few I had from 1955, when Tufts had left the strip and the syndicate continued it with another artist. Wikipedia says it's Al Carreno, but I am not familiar with his work enough to say if he did these. Not as good as those done by Tufts by a long shot, but I guess you have never seen them anywhere. With that I have an earlier ghosted Sunday, from a half year period in 1953 when Tufts didn't do Casey Ruggles. The best guess seems to be Al Plastino, but I have to confess to seeing some Bob Powell in there as well. Then again, maybe not enough to say it is by Powell (who had a very distinct style). Little else to add, except maybe that the sections with Tufts sold out immediately. The ones with these strips (and Tarzan on the back) did not.
Sunday, October 29, 2017
A Liffte Tufts
Saturday Leftover Day.
Warren Tufts' first newspaper strip Casey Ruggles ran from 1949 to 1954. According to the Wikipedia page (citing the always reliable Don Markstein), Tufts did not draw the Sunday page between Auust 1953 and January 1954 (before resuming it himself until September). I knew the strip was continued after that by another artist (acoording to Wikipedia it was Al Carreno). Ghost artists mentioned on the strip are Al Plastino, Alex Toth, Edmund Goode and Ruben Moreira. Of course Alex Toth's work was much earlier and on the dailies. This early Sunday looks like none of the others. Al Plastino was the most adaptable of them, but even him I don't recognize here.
Warren Tufts' first newspaper strip Casey Ruggles ran from 1949 to 1954. According to the Wikipedia page (citing the always reliable Don Markstein), Tufts did not draw the Sunday page between Auust 1953 and January 1954 (before resuming it himself until September). I knew the strip was continued after that by another artist (acoording to Wikipedia it was Al Carreno). Ghost artists mentioned on the strip are Al Plastino, Alex Toth, Edmund Goode and Ruben Moreira. Of course Alex Toth's work was much earlier and on the dailies. This early Sunday looks like none of the others. Al Plastino was the most adaptable of them, but even him I don't recognize here.
Labels:
Al Plastino,
Casey Ruggles,
Edmund Goode,
Ruben Moreira,
Warren Tufts
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