Search Results for: Works of art
history - ducktrap river of maine call us today!
his trout. he contacted the federal government to receive a booklet on how to build a smoker and smoke fish. another building went up on his property, this time a smokehouse the size of a small icehouse ( ′ x ′). des buried an old wood stove in the ground of the smokehouse and started smoking trout....
https://ducktrap.com/ducktrap-101/history/
history - ducktrap river of maine call us today!
his trout. he contacted the federal government to receive a booklet on how to build a smoker and smoke fish. another building went up on his property, this time a smokehouse the size of a small icehouse ( ′ x ′). des buried an old wood stove in the ground of the smokehouse and started smoking trout....
http://ducktrap.com/ducktrap-101/history/
were considered disposable, a temporary distraction, which is why so few copies of golden age books survive today, despite print runs in the hundreds of thousands. the same thought applied to the art used in the production process, tossed aside as an afterthought, or disposed of by publishers. as a result
, the original art for nearly all the classic early works in comic books is lost forever, shredded and tattered, buried in landfills or incinerated and gone to ash. except for one truly remarkable piece, the first highlight of the collection, the original hand-colored art on the silver-print for action...
https://www.comicconnect.com/item/744965