Spotlight on newspaper strip layout: Difference between revisions

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== The pre WWII years ==
== The pre WWII Years ==
In the early years [[Phil Davis]] drew the daily strips on large Bristol board ''(22.5 x 28.5 inches - about 572 x 724 mm)'', where the art for one strip covered about 20.5 x 4.5 inches ''(520.7 x 114.3 mm)''.  
In the early years [[Phil Davis]] drew the daily strips on large Bristol board ''(22.5 x 28.5 inches - about 572 x 724 mm)'', where the art for one strip covered about 20.5 x 4.5 inches ''(520.7 x 114.3 mm)''.  


The daily strip were printed in newspapers with 8 columns a page, and with the Mandrake strip spanning 6 columns. Newspapers were printed in different sizes and the columns therefore had different widths. But, if a column was about 1.83 inches wide the printed Mandrake strip was about 11 x 2.4 inches ''(280 x 61 mm)''. - roughly half of the original art by Phil Davis, and a bit larger than the width of a standard modern comic book ''(10 and 1/8 inches)''. Keeping the same aspect ratio as the original drawings some newspapers printed the strips spanning 5 columns.  
The daily strip were printed in newspapers with 8 columns a page, and with the Mandrake strip spanning 5 or 6 columns. Newspapers were printed in different sizes and the columns therefore had different widths. But, a five columns wide newspaper strip was roughly 10 and <small>1/4</small> x 3 inches ''(260 x 762 mm)''. - Roughly half of the original art by Phil Davis, and about the width of a standard modern comic book ''(10 and 1/8 inches)''.  


In addition the strips were printed with the title<ref group="footnotes">MANDRAKE THE MAGICIAN</ref> was typeset ''(in all upper case letters)'' and positioned to the right in the white space area above that strip, with the byline<ref group="footnotes">By LEE FALK and PHIL DAVIS</ref> on the right. An episode subtitle<ref group="footnotes">a small text related to the strip</ref> ''(in upper and lower case)'' was centered between the title and the byline.  
In addition the strips were printed with the title<ref group="footnotes">MANDRAKE THE MAGICIAN</ref> was typeset ''(in all upper case letters)'' and positioned to the right in the white space area above that strip, with the byline<ref group="footnotes">By LEE FALK and PHIL DAVIS</ref> on the right. An episode subtitle<ref group="footnotes">a small text related to the strip</ref> ''(in upper and lower case)'' was centered between the title and the byline.  
== The WWII Years==
In 1942 newspapers began cutting back on the number of comics they printed due to shortages of materials ''(including newsprint and ink]''. [[KFS]] responded by offering comics in reduced sized, including the Mandrake strip also in 5-column width.





Revision as of 18:47, 25 January 2018

The pre WWII Years

In the early years Phil Davis drew the daily strips on large Bristol board (22.5 x 28.5 inches - about 572 x 724 mm), where the art for one strip covered about 20.5 x 4.5 inches (520.7 x 114.3 mm).

The daily strip were printed in newspapers with 8 columns a page, and with the Mandrake strip spanning 5 or 6 columns. Newspapers were printed in different sizes and the columns therefore had different widths. But, a five columns wide newspaper strip was roughly 10 and 1/4 x 3 inches (260 x 762 mm). - Roughly half of the original art by Phil Davis, and about the width of a standard modern comic book (10 and 1/8 inches).

In addition the strips were printed with the title[footnotes 1] was typeset (in all upper case letters) and positioned to the right in the white space area above that strip, with the byline[footnotes 2] on the right. An episode subtitle[footnotes 3] (in upper and lower case) was centered between the title and the byline.

The WWII Years

In 1942 newspapers began cutting back on the number of comics they printed due to shortages of materials (including newsprint and ink]. KFS responded by offering comics in reduced sized, including the Mandrake strip also in 5-column width.



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Note

  1. MANDRAKE THE MAGICIAN
  2. By LEE FALK and PHIL DAVIS
  3. a small text related to the strip