Tag Archivio per: Vintage

Xtina Comic Strip Closed for Vacation

Xtina Comic Strip Closed for Vacation

Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum, Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

Xtina latest strips on Covid19

Xtina latest strips on Covid19

…published daily in local newspaper

Xtina STRUCTURE & TONE OF THE STORIES: Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum. Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow Xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

Monica Ferrone is a comic strip artist based in Milan. She was born in Washington D.C. as the daughter of artistic parents. After graduating she worked as a graphic artist and in 2014 became head of the Outis Publishing House. In 2015 also started as a cartoonist, creating own comic strip ‘Xtina’ which is published in Italian newspapers like La Nuova Cronaca di Mantova.

Xtina and Frederic Remington

Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum, Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

Created by Monica

Frederic Sackrider Remington (October 4, 1861 – December 26, 1909) was an American painter, illustrator, sculptor and writer who specialized in depictions of the American Old West. A member of the second generation of Hudson River School artists, Remington’s works are known for depicting the Western United States in the last quarter of the 19th-century, featuring such images as cowboys, American Indians, and the United States Cavalry.

Xtina Sunday comic strip

Xtina Sunday comic strip

Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum, Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow Xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

Xtina comic strip First day of summer

Xtina comic strip First day of summer

New comics books and graphic novels

New comics books and graphic novels

from Outisfumetti archives

Xtina comic strip Curriculum vitae

Xtina comic strip Curriculum vitae

Centered on the life of Xtina, in her work as assistant in a Museum, Xtina’s chronicles the daily challenges of a worker. At work, we follow xtina as she copes with friends, relationships, and the day-to-day trials of a working woman living life in the 21st century.

A curriculum vitae, Latin for “course of life”, often shortened as CV or vita (genitive case, vitae), is a written overview of someone’s life’s work (academic formation, publications, qualifications, etc.). Vitae can be plural or possessive (genitive case in Latin). Vitae often aim to be a complete record of someone’s career, and can be extensive. They are different from a résumé, which is typically a brief 1–2 page summary of qualifications and work experience for the purposes of employment, and often only presents recent highlights. In many countries, a résumé is typically the first item that a potential employer encounters regarding the job seeker and is typically used to screen applicants, often followed by an interview. Vitae may also be requested for applicants to postsecondary programs, scholarships, grants and bursaries. In the 2010s it became popular for applicants to provide an electronic text of their CV to employers using email, an online employment website or using a job-oriented social-networking-service website, such as LinkedIn.

Drabble comic strip in Italy becomes Famiglia Belbelli

Drabble comic strip in Italy becomes Famiglia Belbelli

Published weekly in La Settimana Enigmistica 

Kevin Fagan ( 22 June 1956, USA) is the creator of the semi-autobiographical comic strip, ‘Drabble’. He has been working as a syndicated cartoonist through United Feature Syndicate since 1979, when he was 22 years old. His ‘Drabble’ strips are largely based on the author’s college days as a history major at California State University, Sacramento. They have gained large popularity and have been collected in several books. ‘Drabble’ greeting cards have been published by Recycled Paper Greetings and earned an nomination from the National Cartoonists Society for best greeting cards. Fagan and his family reside in Mission Viejo in southern California.

Adam Graphic Novel

Adam Graphic Novel only on outisfumetti.com

Adam

How does a scriptwriter react to the misadventures he has always only imagined?
In this episode the story tells about the animated adventure of Adam, an American author of comics and an expatriate in Cuba, and of his unintentional implication in an episode of the revolution of Fidel Castro.

Rip Kirby the best comic strip start ever

Rip Kirby the best comic strip start ever

Rip Kirby is a 1946-1999 American comic strip created by Alex Raymond and Ward Greene featuring the adventures of private detective Rip Kirby. With a run spanning five decades, the strip was in the hands of writer/artist John Prentice for more than 40 years.

After World War II, Raymond did not return to work on any of his previous successful comic strips (Flash Gordon, Jungle Jim, Secret Agent X-9) but instead began work on a new strip in which ex-Marine Rip Kirby returns from World War II and goes to work as a private detective, sometimes accompanied by his girlfriend, fashion model Judith Lynne “Honey” Dorian. (Her given name and nickname were borrowed from the names of Raymond’s three daughters.)

Rip Kirby was based on the suggestion by King Features editor Ward Greene that Raymond try a “detective-type” strip. First published on March 4, 1946, the strip was given significant promotion by the syndicate, even including fully painted promotional art, a rarity in comic-strip promotions. The strip enjoyed success, and Raymond received the Reuben Award in 1949.

During Raymond’s years on the strip, the stories were initially written by Ward Greene and later, following Greene’s death, by Fred Dickenson. Some sequences were also written by Raymond. In 1956, Raymond was killed in a car crash. King Features quickly needed a replacement and found it in John Prentice. Dickenson continued to write the series until the mid-1980s when he was forced to retire for health reasons. Prentice then took over the writing along with others. Prentice kept the strip going until his own death in 1999. The strip ended with Rip’s retirement on June 26, 1999. Prentice received the National Cartoonists Society Story Comic Strip Award for 1966, 1967, and 1986 for his work on the strip.

Over the years of publication, the strip was ghosted and assisted by many artists and writers, including Frank Bolle (who completed the last episode), Al Williamson, and Gray Morrow.