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#E.H. Shepard
gravity-rainbow · 1 year
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"We'll be friends until forever, just you wait and see." A.A. Milne
sketch by E.H. Shepard
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tomoleary · 4 months
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E.H. Shepard - Endpapers from The Wind in the Willows by Kenneth Grahame
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blogjhm · 10 months
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Christopher Robin goes upstairs to his bedroom taking Winnie the Pooh with him so he can play with Pooh and his other friends.
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redeyeflyguy · 3 days
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A Wonderful Week At The Movies!!! Let’s get this out of the way. I love Winnie-The-Pooh. Both the original books by A.A. Milne and Walt Disney visual adaptations were some of my favorite pieces of media growing up as a kid and out of all of Christopher Robin’s menagerie of stuffed friends, my favorite was the ever bouncey, trouncey, ouncey, and pouncey T-I-double-guh-ER (that spells Tigger). Needless to say, while I don’t remember my exact emotions at the time, I’m 99% confident that I was stoked to see him get his own movie and I’m 99.9% sure that I loved it (a statistic bolstered by the added memories of me listening to the soundtrack/book on CD to death). More than two decades later, this has not changed. Pooh movies have typically been adorably charming low stakes family flicks. These attributes do apply to The Tigger Movie but this one has an added sense of grandiosity in its feel, animation and orchestration. Not to mention, by taking the last line of Tigger’s iconic theme song and saying “discuss” creates an oftentimes fun but also emotionally powerful piece centering around the themes of belonging and found family (on top of Jim Cummings and co. absolutely killing it). No joke. This is one of only two films that has made me shed tears in recent memory. If you’re looking for a good time with the kids and/or love that silly old bear and his friends as much as I do, I highly recommend this movie because the wonderful thing about The Tigger Movie is that The Tigger Movie is a wonderful thing.
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elijones94 · 1 year
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🐯🦉 On and off, I have done sketches and drawings of Tigger and Owl based on E.H. Shepard’s interpretations of the characters in his illustrations of A.A. Milne’s original “Winnie the Pooh” books. Tigger did not appear in the first “Winnie the Pooh” book, which was published in 1924. He made his first appearance in “The House at Pooh Corner”, which was published in 1928. 🐾🍃🍂🌳
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downthetubes · 11 months
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Farshore announces official Winnie-the-Pooh sequel by Jane Riordan and Mark Burgess
Farshore, an imprint of HarperCollins UK, has announced an official Winnie-the-Pooh sequel, written by Jane Riordan, illustrated by Mark Burgess
Farshore, an imprint of HarperCollins UK borne from their acquisition of Egmont Books (formerly Egmont UK Ltd), has announced an official Winnie-the-Pooh sequel, written by Jane Riordan, illustrated by Mark Burgess. Due for release in September, Winnie-the-Pooh: Tales from the Forest brings the beloved character, along with Christopher Robin and his group of woodland friends, back for a new…
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elleventures · 1 year
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E.H. Shepard is a children book illustrator who is known for his works in Winnie the Pooh. With his use of ink and watercolor, I am fascinated by how lively he brings his characters to life.
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Once There Was a Bear: Tales of Before It All Began (Winnie-the-Pooh)
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Pooh Corner
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tomoleary · 4 months
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E.H. Shepard Winnie the Pooh
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blogjhm · 11 months
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There will be a new Winnie the Pooh book coming out on September 28th called Winnie the Pooh Tales From The Forest. Soon I will have all eight of these Winnie the Pooh books. And I hope they can all be put together into a new book called The Complete Tales and Poems of Winnie The Pooh Updated Edition. That would be so cool.
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mrmousetolliver · 5 days
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Map of the Hundred Acre Wood (1926) "drawn by me and Mr. Shepard helpd."
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clarktooncrossing · 3 months
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HEY THERE PEOPLE OF TODAY AND ROBOTS OF TOMORROW! IT'S ME, CLARK!
On New Year's 2024 I vowed to myself that I'd be more productive than ever, streamlining all of my ideas and making a decent living on commissions. While doing that I figured I'd keep my creative muscles limber by posting the occasional DUDEL or Sketch BOOM every now and again. Now chances are these won't be a daily thing. There'll be some days when I'm just feeling too bushed to scribble my silly ideas down on paper or I'll be too busy binging the likes of Steven Universe or Burn Notice. Yes, I am fully aware that those two shows make for a weird combination. Just imagine Michael Westen trying to help out the Crystal Gems, I'd totally watch that. Then again, I have a weird imagination as this DUDEL is about to illustrate.
Christopher Robin had many companions living in the Hundred Acre Woods. Though perhaps none plushy pal holds as special a place in his heart as his dear friend Edward Bear, or Pooh for short. Pooh was not a bright bear. Solving complex equations or discuss the philosophies of Plato were of little use to one who has fluff where his brains would be. Luckily brains aren't required to be intelligent. Old Edward more than made up for this when it came to his immensely large heart. Weather is was protecting his pal Piglet from Jagulars, helping his friend Eeyore find his tail, or simply bouncing around with Tigger, Eddy was the bear everybody turned to. Including Matt Whimsy, the animation magician of Hollywood responsible for Freddy and Fiona Fox. He and his animation team at Whimsy Studios adapted the classic tales of this lovable teddy bear into a series of movies over the years that have outlived A.A. Milne, Matt Whimsy, and even Christopher Robin himself. Now today fans of the characters can meet them at Whimsyland in California whenever not riding Edward's Excellent Expedition, helping the gang from the woods find the fabled North Pole!
Maybe I can help them find it after completing an entire Sketch BOOM. This was meant to be the start of one right up until Rosie Stardust foiled my plans. Dang that Cosmic Cutie and her alien design! Having said that, expect more from my multiversal adventurer later. For now I couldn't let a good design go to waste. What prompted me to draw this was Whimsyland, my answer to the question of what is Brooklyn Nine Nine took place at a theme park instead of a police precinct. Realizing I needed more recognizable characters for this fictional park, I decided to go with the ones that were thankfully in the public domain. Really the challenge was coming up with a design that wasn't similar to those used my a certain company, which I think I succeeded in doing. What helped was going back to the original designs by E.H. Shepard and keeping to the simplistic mindset. My biggest hurtle was Pooh's attire since, despite wearing one in the original freak'n book, I couldn't dress him in a tiny red shirt. So instead I settled on a scarf to fit with his adventurous life style. Here's hoping we'll see more of Old Eddy, Piglet, and Tigger in the future. For now-
MAY THE GLASSES BE WITH YOU!
PS: Oh, you noticed the logo on the bottom, did you? We'll talk about that later...
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humunanunga · 1 year
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So I looked it up, because of course the Holmes books aren't alone to enter the public domain this year, and Metropolis has too. So here's the list I found of creative works that are now public domain:
Books
— The Gangs of New York, by Herbert Asbury (original publication)
— Death Comes for the Archbishop, by Willa Cather
— The Big Four, by Agatha Christie
— The Tower Treasure, the first Hardy Boys mystery by the pseudonymous Franklin W. Dixon
— The Case-Book of Sherlock Holmes, by Arthur Conan Doyle
— Copper Sun, by Countee Cullen
— Mosquitoes, by William Faulkner
— Men Without Women, by Ernest Hemingway
— Der Steppenwolf, by Herman Hesse (in German)
— Amerika, by Franz Kafka (in German)
— Now We Are Six, by A.A. Milne with illustrations from E.H. Shepard
— Le Temps retrouvé, by Marcel Proust (in French)
— Twilight Sleep, by Edith Wharton
— The Bridge of San Luis Rey, by Thornton Wilder
— To The Lighthouse, by Virginia Woolf
Movies
— "7th Heaven," directed by Frank Borzage
— "The Battle of the Century," a Laurel and Hardy film directed by Clyde Bruckman
— "The Kid Brother," directed by Ted Wilde
— "The Jazz Singer," directed by Alan Crosland
— "The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog," directed by Alfred Hitchcock
— "Metropolis," directed by Fritz Lang
— "Sunrise," directed by F.W. Murnau
— "Upstream," directed by John Ford
— "Wings," directed by William A. Wellman
Musical compositions
— "Back Water Blues," "Preaching the Blues" and "Foolish Man Blues" (Bessie Smith)
— "The Best Things in Life Are Free," from the musical "Good News" (George Gard "Buddy" De Sylva, Lew Brown, Ray Henderson)
— "Billy Goat Stomp," "Hyena Stomp" and "Jungle Blues" (Ferdinand Joseph Morton)
— "Black and Tan Fantasy" and "East St. Louis Toodle-O" (Bub Miley, Duke Ellington)
— "Can't Help Lovin' Dat Man" and "Ol' Man River," from the musical "Show Boat" (Oscar Hammerstein II, Jerome Kern)
— "Diane" (Erno Rapee, Lew Pollack)
— "Funny Face" and "'S Wonderful," from the musical "Funny Face" (Ira and George Gershwin)
— "(I Scream You Scream, We All Scream for) Ice Cream" (Howard Johnson, Billy Moll, Robert A. King)
— "Mississippi Mud" (Harry Barris, James Cavanaugh)
— "My Blue Heaven" (George Whiting, Walter Donaldson)
— "Potato Head Blues" and "Gully Low Blues" (Louis Armstrong)
— "Puttin' on the Ritz" (Irving Berlin)
— "Rusty Pail Blues," "Sloppy Water Blues" and "Soothin' Syrup Stomp" (Thomas Waller)
Source: https://www.voanews.com/a/public-domain-debuts-include-last-sherlock-holmes-work-/6898309.html
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