Showing posts with label Crosstown. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Crosstown. Show all posts

Thursday, April 30, 2015

Mixed Messages

In the early days of this blog I did a lot of newspaper comic strip ads. So many, in fact, that I don't always have a lot to add to those. But every once in a while I come across a new one and keep it apart. So here are a couple of news ads, that fit in with those I have shown earlier.
Wednesday Advertising Day.

I thought I had done this Tom Mix ad, but can't find it anywhere. The comic book series was quite succesful and is even mentioned in the Price Guide. My guess is these strips were taken from the same material.


If anythin, this mid fifties ad shows that the Terry and The Pirates brand was exploited regardless of who drew it or what characters were in it. While the series (and probably this ad) was drawn by George Wunder, the comic book advertised probbly reprinted a ten year old story by Milt Caniff.


These His Nibs ads for Nebisco went on for a couple of years. Although not Roland Coe's most exciting work (look for his Crosstown gags on my blog), it was very well executed and probably pretty succesful.


I had never seen this later serious Nabisco ad. My guess is that it is drawn by Elmer Wexler, a very capable artist who spoend the best years of his career doing unsigned (but probably well-paid) advertising work such as this..


These Postum ads by Lou Fine are among the best serious ones that were done in the early fifties. The only ones even better are the Sam Spade and Charlie Wild ads for Wildroot... also by Lou Fine.





Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Healthy Alternative

Wednesday Advertising Day.

Roland Coe was an influential cartoon artist in the forties, most famous for his cub scouts cartoons in The Saturday Evening Post, but he also did cartoons for other magazines as well as a daily cartoon series called Crosstown, which I have shown before. Here are a couple more fresh scans from his most famous ad series, His Nibs for Nebisco. When he joined Johnstone and Cucshing his style became a major influence on artists such as Dik Browne and Gill Fox.

Sunday, October 03, 2010

Not A Cross Word

Monday Cartoon Day.

Roland Coe was best known for his boy scout cartoons in the Saturday Evening Post. His dailey panel covered all of small town life. It's gentle to the point of almost being saccharine, but what saves it for me is his wonderful flowing drawings style (much like his signature, in fact). Here's all I have for 1946 with one of his cartoons from 1945: