So I have posted this set in the Gallery as-is. In the meantime, I'll likely return to either the Judy series with a new volume and doll, or perhaps start a new painted set (we'll see!)
Enjoy these additional plates for the Frank Merriwell series. I had planned to do quite a few more (Frank has an endless wardrobe of sporting clothes through- out his run), but to be honest, it's doubtful I will return to this after so much time has past. Never say never, but let's not count on it. So I have posted this set in the Gallery as-is. In the meantime, I'll likely return to either the Judy series with a new volume and doll, or perhaps start a new painted set (we'll see!) My intention is to restore (to some degree) the old original posts that some of you might recall, which provide more context and notes for this (and other) series. Not sure when I will have time to do that; but you may see some stuff cropping up in the archives slowly throughout the coming year.
2 Comments
So I am reposting this doll and information because after forever and a day, I have finally gotten around to making the printable plates of this particular series. Some history: Gilbert Patten created Frank Merriwell in 1896 for Street & Smith publishers under the pseudonym Burt L. Standish (misprinted here on the first issue shown at right as "Burr"). Patten had no way of knowing then that he would spend the next 16 years (and probably more than 13 million words) writing Frank Merriwell's adventures (25-30 thousand words every single week!). As a commodity, Frank Merriwell was both popular and lucrative! Even as the era of the nickel weekly waned, Frank found audiences in radio and other media. He remained popular into the 1930s when cinema and comic books killed him once and for all. Frank as a character is pretty flat, I think: he's plucky, cheerful, and athletic with no vices whatsoever. Hard to believe this goody-two-shoes could interest young readers, but he was the "it" entertainment of his day (and remember this is prior to the movies, so everything is relative). Still, he was something entirely new in a medium where characters like Buffalo Bill and Jesse James had dominated for decades. Most likely his super-human athletic ability attracted an audience (there was no sport at which he could be fairly bested ~ definitely a precursor to the ideal all-American superheroes who would dominate comic books later), but maybe even more than that, he was someone that young readers could actually relate to. He went to school, he got into fights, and sure, he had crazy globe-trotting adventures (and was attacked by too many wild animals to enumerate [see cover above]), but at the end of the day he was just a nice all-American fella. Anyway, enough with the lesson. I made Frank in watercolors, though I had trouble with his face (because of the style of the time ~ illustrators who drew him gave him the same bland profile that everyone wore in pictures). I did a lot of Photo-shopping after he was painted because my rendition had puppy dog eyes and too weak a chin. He looks better now. He's wearing a pair of wrestling "shorts". Typically worn with tights, but not always (and probably more of a 20th century thing). I've limited his clothing to items he wears on the covers of Tip Top Weekly (one of the first nickel weeklies to go full color on the "wraps" ~ a big deal in 1896). Also, I limited his wardrobe (aside from the wrestling shorts) to items depicted between 1896 and 1900 in order to keep him within the scope of this blog. Lastly, I used the logo from the weekly as his name on the base of the doll. Issues were titled "Frank Merriwell's [something or other]; or, (and then an alternate, more descriptive title)". So I adopted that format for the titles of these blog posts. Click to download a printable version. I will be adding all of Frank Merriwell's plates to the Gallery once he's been posted in his entirety. One of my favorite ephemera blogs is Agence Eureka, which posts many many interesting and wonderful bits of paper fun: matchbook covers, storybooks, playing cards, and fabulous paper dolls and cut-and-assemble toys such as this awesome dirigible from the French broadsheets of Epinal. Unfortunately these treasures were not dated, so I can only assume based on the clothing of the women, this was printed around the turn of the century (maybe not strictly pre-1900, but too cool to pass up anyway).
To see this awesome piece (and several others) in more detail check out this page of Agence Eureka (you'll have to scroll down a wee bit). |
GalleryThis is where you can find original paper dolls to download and print. Categories
All
Archives
October 2015
|