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August 10, 2011

Famous British Caricaturists – Part Two

This list includes both British born artists and those who were born elsewhere but did most of their most important creations in the U.K. The selection is listed in chronological order by date of birth.

Max Beerbohm ( 1872 ? 1956 )

Sir Henry Maximilian “Max” Beerbohm was born in London, son of a well-to-do Lithuanian-born grain merchant. His family gave him he nick-name of Max and that is what he signed himself in his work and was known as for the rest of his life.

Beerbohm was educated at Charterhouse School and Merton College, Oxford but finished without taking a degree as he was already well recognized as a caricaturist and humourist.

He had an incapacity to draw hands and feet but was very good at heads and his dandified figures with inflated heads quickly became his trade-mark. The Times newspaper in 1913 described him as ?the greatest of English comic artists and he was variously hailed as ?the English Goya? and “the greatest portrayer of personalities in the history of art?

Henry Bateman (1887 – 1970)

Bateman was born in New South Wales, Australia of English parents who came back to England soon after he was born. He studied art at Westminster School of Art and the Goldsmith Institute.

His style matured early in life and by the age of 17 it was already established. He achieved a deal with Tatler magazine but is best well-known for his ?The Man Who??.? series of cartoons. These showed hapless people who had committed mostly upper class social faux pas. ?The Man Who lit his Cigar before the Loyal Toast? is a prime example.

Sir David Low (1891 – 1963)

Sir David Alexander Cecil Low was born in New Zealand and taught at Dunedin and Christchurch. He started his professional career in New Zealand and in fact his first effort was published whilst he was just 11 years of age.

He later moved to Australia and subsequently to England and by 1927 was working for The Evening Standard. He is best well-known for his caricatures depicting Hitler and Mussolini both before and during World War II. In fact, generations of New Zealand school children learned about the origins of the Second World War using textbooks illustrated by Low.

He was particularly hated by Hitler and after the war it was discovered that his name was in the ?Black Book? which listed those who the Nazis wished to arrest when they had occupied Britain.

Low was knighted in 1962, a year before his death. His obituary spoke of him as “the leading cartoonist of the western world”

Ronald Searle (b. 1920)

Ronald William Fordham Searle was born in Cambridge and began drawing at the prodigiously early age of five and was working professionally by the age of 15. The War interrupted his art studies and he enlisted in the Royal Engineers .

He was serving in Singapore when he was captured by the Japanese. He was a prisoner of war for the rest of the war eventually working on the notorious Siam-Burma ?Death Railway?. He created, in secret, many drawings depicting conditions in the camps which survived detection by being hidden under the mattresses of dying prisoners.

He returned to England at the end of the war and produced a prodigious volume of work in the 1950?s and 60?s. However he is best known as the creator of ?St Trinians School?.

Gerald Scarfe (b. 1936)

Gerald Anthony Scarfe was born in London and as a child was severely asthmatic. During his early bed-ridden years he busied himself by drawing. He began his working life in advertising but by the early 60?s his caricatures were appearing in ?Private Eye? and this led to a job with the ?Daily Mail?.

But it was his work with the British rock group Pink Floyd for which he is best known especially the illustration for the cover of their 1979 album ?The Wall?.

Searle also provided the caricatures for the opening and closing sequences of the well-liked BBC comedy ?Yes Minister? and in 1998 he drew caricatures of Tommy Cooper, Eric Morecombe, Joyce Grenfell, Les Dawson and Peter Cook which featured on a set of five British postage stamps commemorating British comedians.

If you want one of our unique, hand-painted, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos supplied by you please click on one of these links History Of Rugby. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Custom Cartoons.

June 27, 2011

The Fundamentals Of Making Quilts

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — Owen Jones @ 3:21 pm

If you have never done any quilting before, you may be forgiven for thinking that it looks fairly simple. The fact is that it necessitates a lot of patience, skill and diligence to create a quilt. It certainly is not as easy as it looks. It takes practice and attention to detail. Given that, you must use decent quality textiles if you are considering making a quilt.

Cotton is all right for the job, but it ought to be the lowest you will go. No polyester or other man-made textiles. If you do use these cheap textiles and spend weeks making your first quilt, you will only regret it. If you make mistakes, but the cloth is decent at least there will be that one saving grace.

Once you have chosen your cloth, you can select the style or design that you want. This may seem backwards, and that is OK. If you want, you can choose the style first and then a fabric to match, but I would recommend that you simply stick with cotton for your first quilt.

Next, you have to get hold of a pattern. This is very easy. You can either become a member of a local quilting group, where people will give you conventional patterns or sell you modern ones; or you can go on line and search Google or Yahoo for ‘free quilt patterns’ or you can visit to your local craft shop and buy one that suits your requirements.

You will also require a good set of tools to make your quilt. It is a good idea not to scrimp on these tools as they are not expensive; will make your job a lot easier and will last a very long time. You will require at least one rotary cutter. ‘At least one’ because the large blade cutters are very good for straight cuts whereas a small blade cutter is better for corners or shapes. By the way, these rotary cutters look like pizza cutters.

Because these cutters are sharp, you will also require a cutting board. This can be as simple as a sheet of plywood, trimmed to suit your table top or you can merely lay it on the floor. Without a board, you will damage your table or carpet. You will also need dress-maker’s scissors and large shears. Further requirements are pins, needles, cotton, straight edges and markers.

Your pattern will explain batting and a back cloth and you should pay a great deal of attention to the suggestions in your pattern.

This article cannot be a ‘teach yourself quilting’ manual, but I hope that it has shown you that you do not require a great amount of equipment to make very acceptable bedding quilts. However, with only a little variation of the pattern, you could make some beautiful duvet covers. Not many people make duvet covers, so you could either make them exclusively for yourself or sell them.

Owen Jones, the writer of this piece, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with king size duvets. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Modern Throw Pillows For Sale.

May 7, 2011

Celebrated British Caricaturists – Part One

This list includes both British born artists and those who were born elsewhere but did the majority of their most important drawings in the U.K. The selection is listed in chronological order by date of birth.

William Hogarth (1697 ? 1764)

He was born in London and apprenticed to an engraver where he studied his trade. He became a painter, printmaker, pictorial satirist, social critic and editorial cartoonist and has been accredited with pioneering sequential art or the cartoon strip.

His work ranged from realistic portraiture to comic strip-like series of pictures known as “contemporary moral subjects”. His most famous works are no doubt ? The Harlot?s Progress and ?The Rake?s Progress?.

Isaac Cruickshank ( 1756 – 1811)

Cruickshank was a Scottish painter and caricaturist who was born in Edinburgh. Cruikshank’s first known publications were etchings of Edinburgh “types”, from 1784.

His water colours were exhibited, but in order to make a living it was found that it was more profitable to produce prints and caricatures. He was responsible in part for creating the figure of John Bull, the nationalistic representation of a solid British yeoman.

Isaac Cruikshank was a contemporary of James Gillray and Thomas Rowlandson, and he was part of what has been known as “the Golden Age of British Caricature.

Thomas Rowlandson ( 1756 – 1827)

Thomas Rowlandson was an English painter and caricaturist. He was born in London and after he finished school he studied at the Royal Academy. He was considered a promising student and if he had sustained his early diligence he would have made his mark as an artist.

But he inherited ?7,000 from a French aunt and dived into the dissipations of the town (he was known to sit at the gambling-table for 36 hours at a stretch).

He soon squandered his inheritance but the comradeship and examples of James Gillray and Henry William Bunbury seem to have recommended caricature as a way of filling his stomach and purse.

He also created a collection of erotic prints and woodcuts, lots of which would these days be thought of as pornographic .

James Gillray (1757 – 1815)

James Gillray was a British caricaturist and printmaker who gained great fame for his etched political and social satires, mainly in print between 1792 and 1810.

Some of his best known caricatures were directed at the Royal Family and George III in particular. He is also accountable for probably the most famous political cartoon of all time.

It was entitled ?The Plum Pudding in Danger? . It was printed in 1805 and depicts Pitt and Napoleon carving up the plum pudding of Europe.

By 1811, madness, no doubt made worse by his excessive life-style, was overtaking him and he passed away in 1815.

George Cruickshank ( 1792 – 1878)

George Cruickshank was born in London, the son of the famous caricaturist Isaac Cruickshank and started his working career as apprentice to his father.

He later started out as a caricaturist in his own right and was even paid ?100 in return for a promise not to caricature George IV In later life he switched to book illustrating and illustrated ?Sketches by Boz? and ?Oliver Twist? for Charles Dickens.

After developing palsy he died in 1878. Punch in his obituary said ?There never was a purer, simpler, more straightforward or altogether more blameless man. His nature had something childlike in its transparency.”

If you want one of our unique, hand-made, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos supplied by you please click on one of these links History Of Rugby. If you would like to find out more, please go to our web site at Custom Cartoons.

May 5, 2011

Interior Decorating Ideas For The Home

If you are considering redecorating your home, you are probably searching around for some home interior decorating ideas. Redecorating offers a great chance to express yourself by displaying your style and interests. You do this by matching colours, textiles, styles and artwork. The combinations of possibilities in home interior decorating are really endless. No two houses ever need look the same by accident.

It would be easy to redecorate and adopt any home interior decorating ideas if money were not a constraint. Therefore, the challenge for most people is how to redecorate the home within a budget. You can get home interior decorating ideas from the many interior design items on TV or by purchasing a couple of the home interior design magazines. The problem with the magazines, more so than with the TV items, is that they tend to show ideas that cost thousands of dollars.

The Net is another source of down-to-earth home interior decorating ideas that regular people can afford. The prices of the items used in the Internet displays are normally a lot more affordable as well. The Net is also a good way of comparing the various broad-swathe styles. Styles such as country, modern, traditional, Mediterranean, Provencal, minimalist et cetera.

If you like the older styles such as country, primitive, Provencal or traditional, darker, warmer colours are best. These colours go well with fabrics and old (style), wooden furniture. Wall hangings, paintings of country scenes, curtains and plenty of throw cushions are part of this style of interior design. Autumn colours go well together to produce a warm, friendly, cozy atmosphere.

Modern, minimalist and Mediterranean styles tend to use brighter colours whites and off-whites like magnolia are de rigeur. Home interior decorating ideas for these styles include a lack of clutter and plenty of open space and light. The walls must have one or two pieces of art rather than the six to ten of the older styles. leather furniture goes well here: white or black, with one contrasting throw cushion per seating place. A white cushion on a black sofa or visa-versa.

However, there is nothing wrong with you mixing these style. This often happens anyway, particularly if people give you furniture or you inherit it. if you endeavor to combination different pieces of furniture which naturally from radically different styles, you will require something to bridge the gap between them, so to speak. This can be done most easily with fabrics such as throw cushions, wall hangings such as tapestries, rugs and carpets..

Throw cushions do not all have to match. In fact, in the old days it was very unlikely that all the cushions or pillows in a room would all match, because cushions were often manufactured from off-cuts of fabric from other projects. A assortment of different throw cushions can help you blend styles quite easily. Another way, is to fill an old cabinet with more modern pieces of glass and china.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now involved with Marriott bedding. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Modern Throw Pillows For Sale.

November 14, 2010

The History Of Caricatures

A caricature is a portrait, painting or cartoon that exaggerates or distorts certain features of a person or item to generate an easily identifiable visual similarity.

Caricatures can be discourteous or complimentary and can serve a political point or be drawn solely for entertainment. Caricatures of politicians are commonly used in editorial cartoons, whereas caricatures of movie stars are often found in entertainment magazines.

The term is derived from the Italian caricare- to charge or load. So, the word “caricature” essentially says a “loaded portrait”. Strictly speaking , the term refers just to depictions of real-life people, and not to cartoon fabrications of fictional characters.

However the world-renowned animator Walt Disney claimed that his animation work could be compared with caricature, saying the hardest thing to do was find the caricature of an animal that worked best as a human-like character.

One of the earliest instances of a caricature has been uncovered in the ruins of Pompeii where a graffiti caricature of a politician had been etched on a wall.

Moving forward nearly 1500 years but staying in Italy, Leonardo da Vinci was an active proponent of the art. He actually sought out people with some kind of deformity to use as models.

The point of a caricature was to offer an impression of the original which was more striking than a portrait. Diodemmar Casem, one of the great early exponents, claimed to be able to sum up a person in ? three or four strokes of the pen?.

Caricature underwent its first successes in the closed aristocratic circles of France and Italy, where such portraits would be passed about for mutual enjoyment.

Mary Darley was one of the first professional caricaturists in England and about 1762 published the first book of caricature drawing in England – A Book of Caricaturas

However, the two greatest exponents of the art of the caricature in the 18th century were Thomas Rowlandson and James Gillray. Their styles of output were in great contrast. Rowlandson was the more artistic of the two and took his inspiration from the public at large.

Gillray, on the other hand, was more interested in the political arena and used his art to lampoon political life. Being contemporaries they became big friends and used to spend a great deal of time getting drunk in the taverns of London.

In drawing a caricature the caricaturist can choose to either gently mock or cruelly wound his topic. Drawing caricatures can simply be a variety of entertainment and amusement – in which case gentle mockery is in order – or the art can be employed to make a serious social or political objective.

A caricaturist draws on (1) the natural characteristics of the subject (the big ears, long nose, etc.); (2) the acquired individuality (stoop, scars, facial lines etc.); and (3) the vanities (choice of hair style, glasses, clothes, expressions and mannerisms).

Although caricaturists like Gillray raised a great deal of debate in the 18th century by their portrayal of the Royal family and especially George III, it was nothing compared to the present day pandemonium in the Muslim world brought about by cartoons caricaturing the prophet Mohammed. So the contemporary day caricaturist continues in the satirical mode of his illustrious predecessors.

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November 10, 2010

Giles The Newspaper Cartoonist

Ronald ‘Carl’ Giles was one of the most well-known British post war cartoonists whose work appeared in the British newspapers The Daily Convey and its sister paper The Sunday Express between the dates of 1943 and 1991.

He was born Ronald Giles in Islington, London in 1916. His school-friends nicknamed him ?Karlo? after the actor Boris Karloff to whom they thought he bore a resemblance. This was later shortened to Carl and it remained with him for the rest of his life.

He left school when he was 14 years old and started working as an office boy for a Wardour Street film company where he was later promoted to an animator for cartoon films. This led in 1935 to his working for the famous producer and director Alexander Korda on the first full-length British sound-tracked colour cartoon film, The Fox Hunt.

After a spell working in Ipswich, he joined Fleet Street in 1937. He worked as a cartoonist on the weekly newspaper Reynolds News where his efforts came to the attention of the editor of the Sunday Express and he was offered a job working for both the Daily Express and Sunday Express at the not petty salary of 20 guineas a week. His first cartoon for his new employers was published in the Sunday Express in October 1943.

The 20 guineas a week proved a portent of greater fortunes to come as by 1955 he was being paid no less than 8,060 GBP a week for an output of three cartoons. He was now a wealthy man.

In 1959 he was given the OBE and among his greatest admirers and fans were members of the Royal family who often received originals of his work.

His most famous character creations were The Giles Family who first appeared in August 1945. They were a family from the more affluent side of the British working class living in a suburban semi-detached house. The head of the family was Grandma a real battle axe of a person who anyone crossed at their peril. She is now immortalised as a bronze statue standing in Queen St Ipswich looking up at the office where Giles used to work.

They were used by Giles to comment on a current events in the news of the day and proved to be highly patriotic although cautious of authority. One amazing attribute of the family was that although their homes, hobbies and clothes reflected the changing values of the day, their ages remained unchanged although the cartoons ran for 46 years.

Today any middle-aged, middle class Englishman ( or woman) will have happy memories of the Giles Annual. This was a very welcome addition to the Christmas stocking and contained a selection of Gile’s output for the previous year. For numerous years this collection was chosen by Giles himself.

Carl Giles passed away in 1995 and in 2000 he was voted ‘Britain’s Favourite Cartoonist of the 20th Century’.

If you want one of our unique, hand-painted, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos suppled by you please click on one of these links History of Golf. If you want to know more, please go to website at Custom Cartoons.

November 9, 2010

Punch Magazine

In all probability the first name that comes to mind while thinking of the history of cartoons is that of Punch.

It was a British weekly magazine of humour and satire published between 1841 and 1992. It was started in July 1841 by Henry Mayhew who, with Mark Lemon, was responsible for the editing, and engraver Ebenezer Landells who took care of the illustrations.

Its original sub-title was The London Charivari, after a French satirical humour publication known as Le Charivari. Revealing their satiric and humorous goal, the two editors took the name of the anarchic glove puppet, Mr. Punch, of Punch and Judy renown as the title of the new publication.

On the other hand the name is also a play on words regarding the name of the co-editor Mark Lemon, in that “punch is nothing without lemon”. Mayhew did not stay with the publication for long. He ceased being joint editor in 1842 and became “suggestor in chief” until he left in 1845.

Punch was responsible for the word “cartoon” in the sense of a comic drawing. In fact one of its most famous cartoons, drawn by George Du Maurier, the grandfather of the novelist Dame Daphne Du Maurier , gave rise to the expression ?it is good in parts, like the curate?s egg?. The phrase derives from a cartoon entitled “True Humility”.

It pictured a nervous-looking curate taking breakfast in his bishop’s house.The bishop says, “I’m afraid you’ve got a bad egg, Mr Jones.” The curate replies, “Oh, no, my Lord, I assure you that parts of it are excellent!”

Yet probably its most well-known cartoon is entitled ? Dropping the Pilot? . This was a political cartoon by Sir John Tenniel, first published in March 1890. It depicts the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, as a shipping pilot, stepping off a ship watched by the German Emperor Wilhelm II. Bismarck had recently resigned as Chancellor at Wilhelm’s insistence.

After a very problematic start with much financial difficulty and lack of market success, Punch became a necessity for British middle class drawing rooms because it not only displayed a sophisticated sense of humour and but did not contain the rude material so ubiquitous in much of the alternative satirical press of the time.

The Times utilized small parts from Punch as column fillers, giving the magazine free publicity and indirectly granting a degree of respectability, However respectability was truly gained when it was learned that Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were to be discovered amongst it readership.

The circulation of Punch peaked during the 1940s at 175,000 but thereafter fell into decline, until in 1992 ,after 150 years the publication was forced to close.

In 1996, the Egyptian businessman Mohamed Al-Fayed became tired of the many criticisms he had to put up with from the publication Private Eye and purchased the rights to the Punch name with a view to using it to contend with his antagonist. He relaunched it later that year, but it never achieved any degree of circulation or profitability and in May 2002 it was announced that Punch would finally close for ever

If you want one of our unique, hand-painted, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos suppled by you please click on this link History of Cricket. If you would like to know more, please go to web site at Custom Cartoons.

November 2, 2010

How To Make A Quilt

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , , , — Owen Jones @ 8:23 am

Constructing a quilt takes patience and precision, because there is a great deal of stitching to be done and that stitching has to be neat, straight and even. The material itself needs measuring and cutting and that is to say nothing of choosing and buying the material itself and the batting or stuffing.

You could leave out the stuffing if you want your quilt to be a duvet cover, but more on that later. In this piece we will take a basic look at how to make a quilt.

The first step in constructing a quilt is designing it. You can do this yourself, but if you are a beginner, it would be easier to choose a quilt pattern from a craft shop or craft web site. You should try to train your mind to envisage the final product, the finished quilt. Some people have this ability naturally, but I think that it can be learned.

Do you want a plain quilt or a patterned one? Do you want a patchwork quilt? Patchwork quilts are more of a problem than just using three sheets of cloth, of course, but otherwise the principle is the same.

Once you have purchased your cloth, wash it as you usually would, dry it and iron it. Cotton is lovely and easy for the novice, you can move on to other fabrics later.

Once you have your design or pattern and you have your cloth, you will need to start measuring and cutting. Now, it is a good tip here to get some good tools. You could make a quilt with your son’s school ruler and a pair of kitchen scissors, but you would be making things hard for yourself.

Ideally, you require a long, at least three feet, plastic rule and a equivalent size metal rule. You need a rotary cutter, which looks like a pizza cutter, dress-makers’ scissors and a pair of shears. Never use these cutting instruments for anything but quilt or dress making and never, ever cut paper with them. You will also need a substantial sheet of plywood to lay on your table, so that the rotary cutter does not damage it.

You will also need quilter’s pencils for marking the cuts. There are different types on the market ranging from chalk to lead to soapstone. You will also require pins and needles and thread. When you have these tools and accessories you are clear to baste. Directions on this will be with your pattern. There is a tool to help you do the pinning, because your fingers can get pretty sore after a while. Do not pin your quilt to the carpet.

Quilting is the process of sewing the three layers, the patterned quilt top, the batting or padding and the backing together. This can be done by hand or by machine. Sewing by hand is traditional, but sewing by machine is stronger. and faster. Then you are ready to do the binding. This also assists to give your quilt a professional look. If you want a duvet cover, you do not need batting and you can not quilt the fabric.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a number of subjects, but is now involved with king size duvets. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Modern Throw Pillows For Sale.

March 10, 2010

What Good Do Christian Supplies Do For Me?

Filed under: Uncategorized — Tags: , , , , , , , , — Sunny Emmerwitz @ 6:01 am

I have not always been a Christian. In fact, years ago I really didn’t see the point of any religious faith. It probably has mostly to do with the fact that my family is not Christian and never raised me with any sort of religious beliefs. I guess you could say that I was a lost soul.

That all changed when I was introduced to a certain church of which my friend was a member. This person was my neighbor for a few years but I didn’t really know anything about their Christian faith. I saw them leave to go somewhere every Sunday, but it didn’t occur to me that they were going to church.

One day I was feeling curious, so I strolled on over to my neighbors house to ask them some questions about where they went on Sundays and what they believed. All my questions were answered better than I could have hoped for. I found out many things about Christianity that made a big impact on my mind. Just a few months after that, I decided that I wanted to be of the same Christian faith as my neighbors.

It was shortly afterwards that I decided to take the plunge and become a Christian. To date, that has been the most important decision I have made in my life. I have been exposed to the most wonderful things since I have converted. They are all things that help me have a better outlook on life.

As many others have probably felt, I have felt this distinct desire since I converted to share what I know with my family and friends. I have this sudden intense desire to make my home full of only the best Christian products. That presents a problem though, because you can’t buy Christian resources at the corner store.

Luckily for me, there are a large number of Christian stores that sell things for people like me. They have products for children and adults. They have Jesus art and church bulletins and anything else I could ever be in need of. I visited my local Christian resource store a few weeks ago and I was pleasantly surprised at all they had.

But they also have Christian supplies online. I know that when I am in a bind and I can’t find what I need at my local store, I can go online to find whatever I need. In fact, many times you will be exposed to a whole new class of items that you didn’t know about before.

I can say that my life is different in a very good way since I converted to being a Christian. Things are different now. My home is the kind of place where everyone loves to come because they have access to all sorts of great Christian material. And to think that it all started with my neighbors introducing me to their church.

Finding affordable and quality church supplies doesn’t have to be a tedious task. Save time by shopping for Christian resources online and find everything you need for your next service. Or shop for supplies for personal use.

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