Showing posts with label dress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dress. Show all posts
Thursday, March 31, 2011
December 12, 1953: Mitten applications
Why does Patty look so concerned in the last panel? I think it's less because of Charlie Brown's inventive use for a mitten as the fact that it looks like Snoopy is wearing one of her dresses. Check it out in the first panel here.
Patty's dress has the same wide-spaced crosshatching that Snoopy's sweater has here. The pattern of Patty's dress is of course covered up by her coat, which is why Schulz can use it for Snoopy's attire; otherwise the reader would be left wondering if there was some point of connection between the two. I think it looks very nice on the dog, as it gives his sweater a kind of quilted look.
Labels:
charliebrown,
crosshatching,
dress,
mittens,
patty,
snoopy,
winter
Monday, December 13, 2010
August 6, 1953: The weirdness of Patty's dress
Lucy exhibits surprising self-awareness here. She loses these introspective powers as she comes into her own as neighborhood terror.
It's worth noting, for a moment, the bizarre attributes of Patty's dress. All the girls typically wear skirts in this phase of Peanuts' development. Some time earlier, when a girl bent over Schulz didn't bother to wrap the skirt around the legs. In this strip, however, he cheats Patty's legs and skirt longer as she stoops down to Lucy's height.
Even more interesting, however... look at the cross-hatch pattern on her dress. Does something look odd about it? It's like the cloth is a shaped hole in the paper, revealing the pattern behind it. Due to the small size of the panels on the page, I think the pattern reads better this way than if it were more realistically drawn.
I love it when comic strips do things like this. A contemporary example, to borrow from outside the artform for a moment, is in the Monkey Island series of computer games. Most of them feature a salesman character named Stan who wears a loud checked sportcoat. The pattern on the coat is applied across the folds of cloth in much the same way as the pattern on Patty's dress. This fan drawing on Stan (taken from here) illustrates the effect:
Recently the series made the jump to polygonal, 3D graphics. The pattern on his coat is considered to be such an integral part of the character that the developers went to special trouble to preserve the effect (source page):
Labels:
art,
crosshatching,
depressed,
dress,
legs,
lucy,
patty,
psychology,
stan,
waah
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