It’s like Sparky returned to his old gig

IMG_0993.JPGCharles Schulz’s lettering style was distinct. I’m used to seeing the work of a lot of professional comic book letterers (from the old days of hand lettering; most of it is done by computer now), but I’m used to seeing each letterer’s work being placed over a range of different artists. While Schulz was briefly a professional letterer before his own cartooning career took off, it was before his lettering style was fully developed. So when I see something that looks like Schulz lettering from the later years, and it’s not on Schulz art, I get taken aback. However, there have been a number of computer fonts generated based on his lettering, and while those are sometimes seen in a Peanuts context, sometimes they are not… such as the illustration that is here. This particular example is from Hilo: The Boy Who Crashed to Earth, the first in a new graphic novel series from Judd Winick (who a few of you may remember from his days on MTV’s The Real World, and who the comics cognizant may know from such acclaimed works as the moving Pedro & Me and the hilarious Barry Ween, Boy Genius, but who I know because hey, he provided cartoons for some of the Complete Idiot’s Guide books I wrote, and then we got to know each other online and at conventions.) Used just for the chapter headers and differing strongly from the font used in the dialogue balloons, this really leaps out and makes my brain go “hey, what’s that doing here?”

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The real Linus’s real cartooning

Like many Peanuts fans, I knew that the character of Linus was named after Linus Maurer, who worked at Art Instruction alongside Schulz. Like seemingly fewer fans, I knew that Maurer himself had been a syndicated cartoonist… but for some reason I never saw any of his strip before today. …

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Campaign Peanuts redux

I don’t normally just repost my blog entries… but this one seems as relevant now as when I first posted it in 2019. Only the word “many” seems dated. Of the many presidential candidates, I think Schulz only mentioned one in Peanuts. which isn’t to say that you can’t find …

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I suspect that’s not Schulz

The only thing I have to say about this ad from 1967 is “no”.   40 SHARES Share Tweet this thing Follow the AAUGH Blog