Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animals. Show all posts

Friday, May 16, 2014

Family Album

Judged by its cover, this library sale leftover looked more than a little bizarre—
"Grub," according to Goodall's introduction, was simply the family's nickname for son Hugo Eric Louis van Lawick, who spent extended periods of infancy and early childhood accompanying his parents on research trips.

Or, as the pictures and words have it—
There was a time when chimps came first in their lives...

but then things changed.
Grub, says Goodall
... had learned to imitate the roar of a lion, the whooping call of a hyena, the strange high-pitched bark of a zebra, and the grunting and lowing of a wildebeeste long before he could speak a single word of human language.

...

By the time Grub was two he could recognize and identify most of the different sorts of wild animals we encountered around camp or on our drives, just as a city child may pick out different makes of cars he sees in the streets. Grub stands no more danger of being attacked by a wild animal than a city child of being knocked over by a car, but from dawn to dusk our son is never out of the sight of some responsible person.
With pictures mostly by the photographer father, this originally was intended for grandparents and other family, not for publication, says Goodall.
But because so many people enjoyed it we decided that the pictorial account of a baby's life, in surroundings quite out of the ordinary to most people, might be appealing to other children and perhaps to their parents as well.
The result is a weirdly arresting mix: pictures from a childhood lived exceptionally close to a dramatic natural world—
Accompanied by the cutesiest of captions.
I made sure I didn't get left behind...

when Daddy and Mummy packed up to drive 600 miles to the shores of Lake Tanganyika

where the chimps are.
Mummy and Daddy built a whole, huge, strong, well-provisioned cage...
for ME!
In the next year's return to the field—
One morning I asked Mummy to help me study an elephant. But she wouldn't go close enough,
so I decided to study zebra on my own.

When I had finished I rushed back to tell Mummy about them.

The next day we moved to the Serengeti and I was able to get my first close look at a giraffe. Unfortunately it galloped away when Mummy ran after me.

Soon after this Daddy employed two nannies...
they were HUGE fun!

I always helped to collect firewood.


After reassuring readers about adult supervision, the book closes with Grub's kindergarten career ("I attended the local school and enjoyed outdoor sports the most")...
But I kept up O.K. with the academic side, too.

The End...
I've grown up a lot this year. I've learned to be ready for anything.
Now I'm all set for my next safari.

Sunday, April 28, 2013

Plush

Two exposures do one pillow make—
They also double the fluffy kitten goodness: same kitty, two poses. The only difference is that on the front cover (right), the poor thing is missing a bit of ear because I tried to remove an annoyingly placed price sticker.

Inside this 1971 booklet, a very '70s bentwood and wicker bench is the main photo model for assorted handiwork.

I do like this other period approach, of making a Modern Design cozy—

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Four Little Pages

At the local library book sale, I sometimes check out ten-to-a-pack baggies of loose illustrations. These have been removed from miscellaneous materials, but most are from damaged books.

I always have mixed feelings about buying these. There's the sad fact that books are being destroyed. It's also frustrating to find an interesting illustration out of its published context: artist and source material are usually unknown and not likely to be identifiable.

Even when the reverse of a picture has some text, that is rarely specific enough to identify an author, illustrator, or title.

But among my last purchases at this sale was a pack of dog illustrations that included:



Poses, props, and overall Depression-era look of the photos had to be the work of Harry Whittier Frees.

Reverse sides had bits of the story, and among the characters' names were, "Wags and Tags and Rags and Obadiah."

That led the way to a Frees book: Four Little Puppies.

According to this database, the book was last reprinted in 1983, and first published by Rand McNally in 1935.

The original publisher recycled this book in the '50s and '60s, under the "Elf" imprint. These pages must come from an edition like this example.

My pages have some story fragments—
After that, Wags practiced his banjo lesson.
He practiced all his scales.
He practiced his one-paw exercises.
And he practiced his new piece, "Bone, Sweet Bone."
Another page—
But Fido and Fritz did not answer. They were taking a drive in their new dog cart.
Too bad the illustration is missing. Though one can probably get the general idea from the cat cart in this 1937 Life article about Frees.

Frees' work, from the 1930s and earlier, just keeps getting recycled, in print and elsewhere.

I first learned Frees' name way back when sister J. sent me this image: an updated-for-the-1980s post card—

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

Sunday, November 28, 2010

Stop That, Kitty Cat!


Live action meets cartoons, in a 1968 cheaply-produced children's book.

A mish-mash of drawings and story based on photos from three sources.

One is Walter Chandoha,who was all over the cute cat market, in magazines and newspapers of the period.

There are pictures from "Three Lions, Inc." -
A lot of these involve yarn or string. Which may spell "cat mischief," but I'm still not sure if the company's main business was photography or selling fiber.

The third photo source is "ZFA, Dusseldorf":

At the risk of repeating myself: a mish-mash...


Monday, November 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: November

Nice cat...

... Although our artist seems to be observing National Boring Generic Props Month.

Friday, October 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: October


Time to harvest a fine crop, by the bushel full!

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: September

Sure, there's more centerpiece here than table.

But when you can gaze on these beauties, who needs mere surface?

Sunday, August 15, 2010

Marine Products

Found on a shelf in a Chinese supermarket—
This is on glossy paper, 6 x 10 1/2 inches. It may have been packed in a shipping carton, then put aside and forgotten as shelves were stocked.

The gaudy colors—and the humanoid fish—remind me of this Max Fleisher underwater world...

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: August



Of all the months, this credibility failure is my favorite:

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: July

No farm should be without one!

Once again, a closer look reveals an interesting sense of scale:

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: June


It's time for an early harvest of—
what else, but... tiger!

Saturday, May 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: May


This month, our models pose in the lush spring greenery.

Our calendar artist's efforts merit an even closer look at this landscape.

Note, in particular, the left edge of that log—

Thursday, April 1, 2010

Tiger Of The Month Club: April

This handsome duo get into the spirit of the spring pagan rites
with a basket full of pysanky!

Monday, March 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: March

Harbinger of Spring, and fashion trendsetter.

And, in response to those astronomers of 1922
(see this month's Frate Indovino)—
felis rules the world of 2010!

Monday, February 1, 2010

Tiger of the Month Club: February


February: a good month for cabin fever?

Not with Panthera tigris to liven things up!

Friday, January 1, 2010

One More

Another piece of calendar art, for the Year of The Tiger.

And great tigers, they are.

Take our January model—


Though I'm not completely sure about those Ukrainian habitats of theirs...