CR Blog

New stamps honour comic icons

Graphic Design, Illustration

Posted by Creative Review, 20 March 2012, 10:34    Permalink    Comments (6)

The Royal Mail has issued ten new stamps celebrating some of the best-known characters from British comics. The stamps are timed to coincide with the 75th anniversary of The Dandy

The stamps were designed by The Chase. Each one features a well-known character with a front page from the comic in which they appeared – indeed some are still in print today.

The Topper was published by DC Thomson Ltd and ran from 1953 to 1990, when it merged with The Beezer. Mickey the Monkey was the original cover star. Beryl the Peril was created by David Law as a female Dennis the Menace (also created by Law). The strip ran from the first issue, taking over the cover in 1986

 

2000 AD was first published in 1977. It is most noted for its Judge Dredd stories, and has been contributed to by a number of artists and writers who became renowned in the field internationally, such as Alan Moore, Neil Gaiman and Grant Morrison. Judge Dredd is a law enforcement officer in a city of the future where uniformed Judges combine the powers of police, judge and jury

 

The Beano first appeared on 30 July 1938. The Dennis the Menace strip (now known as Dennis and Gnasher) first appeared in 1951 and is the longest running strip in the comic. Other iconic strips include the Bash Street Kids, Roger the Dodger and Minnie the Minx

 

Bunty was published by DC Thomson from 1958 to 2001. It consisted of a collection of many small strips, typically the stories themselves being three to five pages long. The Four Marys was the longest story. The comic ran from its creation in 1958 to its end in 2001. It centered around four young teenagers who lived in a girls-only boarding school in Elmbury

 

Buster ran from 1960 to 2000 and carried a mixture of humour and adventure strips. The title character, whose strip usually appeared on the front cover, was Buster. He was originally billed as Buster: Son of Andy Capp, the lead character of the Daily Mirror newspaper strip, and wore a similar flat cap to reinforce the connection

 

The first issue of Eagle was released in April 1950. Revolutionary in its presentation and content, it was enormously successful; the first issue sold about 900,000 copies. Featured in colour on the front cover was Dan Dare, Pilot of the Future, created by Frank Hampson. Other popular stories included Riders of the Range and P.C. 49. Eagle also contained news and sport sections, and educational cutaway diagrams of sophisticated machinery

 

The Dandy was first published in the United Kingdom by D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd in December 1937 and is the world's longest continuously published comic. Wild-west hero Desperate Dan first appeared in December 1937. The world’s strongest man, he shaves with a blow torch ands eats cow pies complete with the tails and horns

 

Tiger was published from 1954 to 1985, and featured predominantly sporting strips. Its most popular strip was Roy of the Rovers, recounting the life of Roy Race and the team he played for, Melchester Rovers. This strip proved so successful it was spun out of Tiger and into its own comic

 

Twinkle, 'the picture paper especially for little girls', was published by D. C. Thomson & Co. Ltd from 1968 to 1999. It was aimed at young girls and came out weekly, Nurse Nancy, who ran a toy hospital with her grandfather, was one of the most popular characters

 

Valiant was a British boys’ adventure comic which ran from 1962 to 1976. It was published by IPC Magazines and was one of their major adventure titles throughout the 1960s and early 1970s. Aside from World War II characters like Captain Hurricane, Valiant ran innovative science fiction strips like the Steel Claw, a scientist rendered invisible by his artificial hand

More details here

 

 

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6 Comments

Misread the headline as 'New stamps honour Comic Sans'. Combined with the part-demolition of the Comedy Carpet, that would have been a bad week for design
Tom dG
2012-03-20 12:00:20


great idea, but it kind of highlights what a poor tradition in comics the UK has, compared to France/Belgium (Hergè, Peyo, Goscinny & Uderzo, Moebius...), Argentina (Mordillo, Quino...), the US or even Italy (Crepax, Manara, Bonvi, Silver...).
Claire
2012-03-20 12:46:59


Mmmm not that great execution given the subject matter and potential opportunity but I imagine that's because a client or Some Woman In Marketing (a SWIM) got involved in the thought process – the Chase don't usually do average.
John
2012-03-20 15:59:51


Unfortunately they're not 'A joy to behold - And be holding'
Curator
2012-03-20 21:46:20


Why do I never get given these sort of stamps in the PO? Do they actually go into circulation or are they only for stamp collectors?
zuko
2012-03-21 16:49:56


If you think that The Eagle is evidence of a "poor tradition" in UK comics, you should be selling stamps for a living and not designing them
Johnny
2012-03-22 14:21:56


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