• 17Apr

    DETAILS: =============================== PLUTO Style: Pop Art Total Time: approx. 1 hour 12 mins Graphic Pencil & PrismaColor Markers OTHER DISNEY SERIES Pieces: #1 Peter Pan & Flit www.youtube.com #2 Snow White and TinkerBell www.youtube.com #3 Carl Fredricksen from UP www.youtube.com OTHER POP ART Piece: FRED FLINSTONE www.youtube.com POPEYE www.youtube.com YODA www.youtube.com Wonder Woman www.youtube.com OTHER PORTRAT DRawings: Katniss Everdeen from The Hunger Games www.youtube.com Harry Potter Trio www.youtube.com Kate www.youtube.com ———————- MUSIC ———————- Royalty Free Music from: incompetech.com Dan O’Connor aka Dan-O Owner and Music Producer DanoSongs.com LINKS ================================ YOUTUBE: youtube.com TWITTER: twitter.com DAILYBOOTH: dailybooth.com TUMBLR: itzjed.tumblr.com Buy a SHIRT: bleebo.spreadshirt.com TAGS bleebo jed vlog blog video log art artist draw drawing graphite pencil speeddrawing speed fast quick timelapse channel wonder woman dc comics movie pop art markers prismacolor pluto dog mickey mouse “mickey mouse” disneyland disneyworld magic goofy minnie donald duck daisy walt disney

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  • 21Mar

    Pluto, also called Pluto the Pup, is a cartoon character created in 1930 by Walt Disney Productions. He is a light brown (most recently yellow), medium-sized, short-haired dog. Unlike Goofy, Pluto is not anthropomorphic beyond some characteristics such as facial expression. He is most often the companion of Mickey Mouse, although he first appeared as Minnie Mouse’s dog Rover in the film The Picnic (1930). Officially a mixed-breed dog,[1] Pluto is clearly modelled on the English Pointer breed, most evident in the film “The Pointer”. The prominent Disney artist Norm Ferguson owned an English Pointer. [2] Pluto debuted in animated cartoons and appeared in 24 Mickey Mouse films before receiving his own series in 1937. All together Pluto appeared in 89 short films between 1930 and 1953. Several of these were nominated for an Academy Award, including The Pointer (1939), Squatter’s Rights (1946), Pluto’s Blue Note (1947), and Mickey and the Seal (1948). One of his films, Lend a Paw (1941), won the award in 1942.[3][4] Because Pluto does not speak, his films generally rely on physical humor. This made Pluto a pioneering figure in character animation, which is expressing personality through animation rather than dialogue.[5] Like all of Pluto’s co-stars, the dog has appeared extensively in comics over the years, first making an appearance in 1931.[6] He returned to theatrical animation in 1990 with The Prince and the Pauper and has also appeared in several direct-to-video films

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  • 22Jun

    Making a sketch of Disney’s Pluto.

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