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Dutch comics are comics made in the Netherlands. In Dutch the most common designation for the whole art form is "strip" (short for "stripverhaal" – "strip story" – , though the old-fashioned expression "beeldverhaal" – "picture story" – remains utilized on occasion, particularly in formal texts and treatises on the subject matter), whereas the word "comic" is used for the (usually ...
Print/export Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikimedia Commons; ... Help. Pages in category "Dutch comic strips" The following 30 pages are in ...
Bobo is a monthly Dutch children's magazine published by Blink Publishers. Consisting of comics and stories, it is named after the protagonist Bobo, a nine year old blue anthropomorphic rabbit. The magazine has run since 1968 and was initially translated from the English-language Bobo Bunny magazine [citation needed], published from 1969 to ...
The stories were published in the Dutch newspaper Het Parool. Like all Dutch comics in the 1940s and 1950s Kapitein Rob was a text comic, where the text was written below the images. [1] This allowed the stories to be represented as Rob's personal captain's log. The comic strip was a huge success and published in oblong format. Apart from "Het ...
For that newspaper, Toonder and Dick created a new comic strip, Tom Puss, about a small white cat. Dick invented the name and wrote the first two stories. [1] The series became one of the classic Dutch comics. In 1944 their second son, Onno, was born. The birth was a difficult one and nearly killed Phiny.
Image credits: drawerofdrawings When asked how he comes up with new ideas for his comics, D.C. Stuelpner shared that he has a daily routine and a specific time dedicated to brainstorming: “Every ...
Donald Duck is the Dutch flagship weekly Disney comics magazine, first published on October 25, 1952. [5] The magazine was originally published by the staff of the women's magazine Margriet, and every Margriet subscriber received the first issue for free. [6] The comic is mainly aimed at younger children, and includes a letters page from ...
Boes ("Ox Tales") is a Dutch newspaper gag-a-day comic strip created by Wil Raymakers and Thijs Wilms. It was created in 1980 [1] and spawned a popular anime television series between 1988 and 1991, titled Ox Tales in the English-speaking world. The comic managed to outlive the animated adaptation and still continues to appear as a column strip ...