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History of the British comic - 21st century | A Wisdom Archive on History of the British comic - 21st century |  | History of the British comic - 21st century A selection of articles related to History of the British comic - 21st century |  |
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History of the British comic, History of the British comic - 19th Century, History of the British comic - 20th century, History of the British comic - 21st century, History of the British comic - History, History of the British comic - List of British Comics, History of the British comic - Overview, History of the British comic - The Reprint Market
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ARTICLES RELATED TO History of the British comic - 21st century |  |  |  | History of the British comic - 21st century: Encyclopedia II - History of the British comic - History
History of the British comic - 19th Century.
In the 19th century, story papers, also known as "penny dreadfuls", served as entertainment for British children. Comic strips began to emerge slowly. Ally Sloper's Half Holiday, (1884), is reputed to be the first comic strip magazine to feature a recurring character, and the first British comic as would be recognised today.
In 1890 two more comic magazines debuted to the British public, Comic Cuts and Illustrated Chips, both published by Amalgamated Pres ...
See also:History of the British comic, History of the British comic - Overview, History of the British comic - History, History of the British comic - 19th Century, History of the British comic - 20th century, History of the British comic - 21st century, History of the British comic - The Reprint Market, History of the British comic - List of British Comics Read more here: » History of the British comic: Encyclopedia II - History of the British comic - History |
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 |  |  | History of the British comic - 21st century: Encyclopedia II - History of the British comic - The Reprint MarketThe comics reading public in Britain were not always able to get reliable supplies of American comic books and yet have always enjoyed the different approach to comics writing from the other side of the Atlantic. So the lack of reliable supplies was supplemented by a variety of black and white reprints of Marvel's 1950s monster comics, Fawcett's Captain Marvel, and some other characters such as Sheena, Mandrake the Magician, The Phantom etc. Several reprint companies were involved in repackaging American material for the Britis ...
See also:History of the British comic, History of the British comic - Overview, History of the British comic - History, History of the British comic - 19th Century, History of the British comic - 20th century, History of the British comic - 21st century, History of the British comic - The Reprint Market, History of the British comic - List of British Comics Read more here: » History of the British comic: Encyclopedia II - History of the British comic - The Reprint Market |
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 |  |  | History of the British comic - 21st century: Encyclopedia II - History of the British comic - OverviewBritish comics typically differ from the American comic book in a variety of respects. Although historically they shared the same format size, based on a sheet of imperial paper folded in half, British comics have moved away from this size, with the Beano and The Dandy the last to adopt a standard magazine size in the late 1980s. Until this point, the British comic was also usually printed on newsprint, with black or a dark red used as the dark colour and the four colour process used on the cover. The Beano and ...
See also:History of the British comic, History of the British comic - Overview, History of the British comic - History, History of the British comic - 19th Century, History of the British comic - 20th century, History of the British comic - 21st century, History of the British comic - The Reprint Market, History of the British comic - List of British Comics Read more here: » History of the British comic: Encyclopedia II - History of the British comic - Overview |
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