Showing posts with label Chip an' Dale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chip an' Dale. Show all posts

Sunday, October 7, 2012

Little Golden Books make for Happy Kids!

Sunday's a good time to turn your brain off and look at things that make you happy.  Maybe that's the appeal for some people to go to church...

The other day on Facebook, a few other art appreciators and I trailed off topic and someone brought up Little Golden Books, one thing led to another and the scanning started.  Below are the Little Golden Books that sit proudly in my collection.  There are a few more stuffed in a box of Christmas type stuff one of which I've already posted here and the rest I'll get to by December, I'm sure.  

These are books that I've carried with my since I was a wee tyke, with the exception of the Bugs Bunny and Road Runner ones which I picked up in my teen years, just because I was starved for real cartoons.  The late 70's was a very bad time for fans of real cartoons.

People ask, why did you keep your children's books?  You're forty-freakin-nine years old?!?  The answer being, even as a tot, when it came time to toss away such things, I knew that there be true art here.  I knew this was something to treasure.

AND I had the best mom in the world and she spoiled me rotten.

I don't apologize for that.  I deserved it.

Drink in these beautiful "LGB patented washable covers" and see if you don't agree.

And see if you don't find a few familiar books from your own past.

Bob Clampett's Beany & Cecil the Seasick Sea Serpent.  We had a B&C board game when I was a kid too.  I was born after the TV show was done airing in my area, so my exposure to these great characters was here first.  I was probably in my 30's before I ever saw an episode of the cartoon and in my 40's before I ever saw the puppet show.  I was sure glad I had this when I finally did!


A Hanna=Barbera cartoon that wasn't even a cartoon at the time.  Didn't stop the drawings from being funny though...just looka that twisted horn dinosaur!  Awesome!


That's right.  I know my colors!  Incredible art in this one.


I learned an awful lot about dinosaurs from this book.  Most of the info is now out of date, but these paintings are wonderful!


As a very small child of 4 or 5 years old in Montana reading this one, I remember turning to my brothers Richard and Mike and saying "Wouldn't it be neat if this place was real?".  They smirked, called me a dumb kid and told me it was.  When I was 22 I moved to California where I knew no one, had no where to live and no job prospects.  This is the first place I went, just in case I had to turn tail back home.


I wish I was small enough to play on a toy boat!


The paintings in this one still have me mesmerized as well.


Hanna-Barbera's early "menagerie characters" look even better in book form than they do on their shows, if you ask me.


Ah, Marge's Little Lulu.  What a bunch of appealingly ugly little kids.


Very off=mode for an officially sanctioned book.  Disney did that kind of things for their albums a lot too...it really lends to the fairy tale aspect.


The aforementioned late-comers to the stacks.  Loved none the less.



Another cartoon from before my time...but when I started learning about cartoon history (you know, the IMPORTANT kind of history) I was ahead of the curve because of this book.


I'm sure I was exposed to other takes on Ma Goose as a kid, but this is the one in my minds eye.  Could there ever be a more perfect Simple Simon than Goofy?  I don't think so.


Another book with some really striking paintings.  That bunny and his magic nose are so deeply ingrained in my brain, I don't thinkyou could get them out with a crowbar!


Disney's Winnie is as iconic as Milne's Winnie.  Not often a character can embody two such distinctly different looks and feels and work well in both.


Never understood this one.  School was a chore I could have done without.  learning was great, but did I really need to be subjected to that environment 7 hours a day?  I don't think so.  These drawings were worth being exposed to, though.


Now for the main answer to "Why do I still have these" and maybe you hadn't thought of this yet "Why were they right where you could find them when it came up on Facebook?".  The answer is simple.

Little Golden Books make me happy.

Talk to you soon.

Saturday, December 5, 2009

Walt Disney - A Magical Creator/Innovator/Visionary - NOT for Revisionists to Slander

Walt Disney was born today in 1901, he WOULD be 108 years old...damn cigarettes!

See how dumb that sounds?

Walt Disney was an incredibly talented man. He saw what he wanted to accomplish, and had the chutzpah to get it done. The things that he did cannot be wrangled by anyone in this day and age; in fact, this day and age would partially not be what it is if not for some of the things he did to drag us from the century before last into the modern age of today. He caused great technological advancements for all the right reasons. Spawned by creativity and an artistic sense, that technology was needed to help him achieve his goals.

Too often now, people create the technology and look for reasons to use it instead of the other way around...bad news for us. Take a look at that motion-capture travesty of "A Christmas Carol" that's being released with Walt's name on it. Horrid! Makes me want to wretch.

Enough about all that nonsense though. This blog is about positive influences. This blog is about the truth. For more about steps (leaps) made by Uncle Walt, see my earlier post here.

Walt was a storyteller above all else. He had a knack for telling a joyful story in and entertaining and appealing way. Walt put together the best and the brightest and guided them in the right direction...then let them work their magic. And magic, it was.

THAT's his legacy.

What better way to enjoy that legacy than admiring the work of the man himself. Since Christmas is sneaking upon us, here's some Disney cartoons with a Christmas theme, enjoy!

From 1932, here's Mickey (as voiced by Walt himself) and Pluto in "Mickey's Good Deed":



A color "Silly Symphony" from the same year, "Santa's Workshop":



And from 20 years later, 1952, here's Pluto, Mickey and Chip an' Dale in "Pluto's Christmas Tree" (watch for cameos by Goofy, Donald Duck and Minnie Mouse at the end):



Thanks Walt!

Again and again and again!

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