Keskustelujen arkisto

Pages: 1 2
Author

Topic: Scrooge McDuck 'Mickey and Friends' artwork

(22 messages)
WB
Personally, I love the new Mickey Mouse cartoons. Its the most active and fun the Mouse has been in years barring House of Mouse. I accept that its a different take on the classic shorts and, thankfully, it doesn't skirt of the line of John K. style over the top crude humor.

I know my 6 year old niece loves them, watches them with my older brother and constantly asks when a new one is coming out.

That said, I wouldnt mind a new short done in the regular style once in a while. But those cost a lot of money to do and I like when they treat them as something special like "Home Theater" or "Get a Horse" which was the "new" black and white short.

Quote:Now, does anybody know how I can possibly remove the background of this image, to make a clipart version of Scrooge?
It's not the prettiest Photoshop job I've ever done but here you go. Hope that helps

http://i97.photobucket.com/albums/l214/jongraywb/scrooge-2_1.png
Scroogerello
Thank you so much, WB! Very neat! :D
Mickey
Scroogerello, Hi! Hopefully WB will not be offended, but he missed a couple of slices of green, that's more pure art!
http://i63.fastpic.ru/big/2015/0208/03/66f8d3113cde366f1a055d9e75074503.png
Scroogerello
Thank you, Mickey! :D I agree that your version is more neat, but I'm thankful that both of you put effort in helping me!
WB
No offense taken at all. I did mine super quick. Yours is much better!
Thomps2525
Speaking of the Beagle Boys.....an occasional Carl Barks story would depict many more than just six of them. Each Beagle Boy wore a shirt with his prisoner identification number on the front: 176-167, 176-176, 176-617, 176-671, 176-716 or 176-761. The one who wore 176-167 is the one who likes prunes. On DuckTales, the Beagle Boys were given different looks and different names, but in the comics they each used one of those six combinations of numbers. The first three digits were always 176. Using those same digits for the final three numbers allows just six different combinations and Barks used them all. When more than six Beagle Boys appeared in a story, did the additional ones have numbers? If so, what were they? I have to dig out my old Uncle Scrooge comics and start checking.
Pages: 1 2