
This image is great.

Resizing experiment:
The way the gun is in silhouette makes it very clear who's going to get out alive. Lots of black in all of these.

This one was found on the internet. All these are inked line on large cels and rear painted. The attention to detail and excitement of shapes are beyond words.

There is also this great one with the Crunchberry Beast. The drawings and lettering are incredible.
I think this character is a lot like my Laughin' Larry character. Same enthusiasm!!+copy.jpg)
This is a good one too but not the one I saw at the store. The one I saw had Crunchberry Beast going nuts.
These other older cereal box designs are so right on, I had to post them. The fact they thru in realistic fruit for a few letters makes these more tastier already!
The drawing here was traced off a large blow up about the size of 11 by 17. It's easier to get to the details at a larger size, and then shrinking it down.
The font used is called "Font Diner" the book will look more consistent if the titles are all the same. This was drawn from looking at the picture of the ride it's self. I heard a roomer that they may be remodeling 'Small World'?
This one was drawn while watching the movie. I used some Al Hirshfield to improve my Mary.
Returning back to these and updating them, really does make them look better each time.
Rough size mock up of Dishonest John, Uncle Captain and Beany Boy. Looks like a John Kricfalusi creator of 'Ren and Stimpy' but could be Don Shank. These were made 21 years ago in 1989.
I founds these animation cels online for sale from Marv Newland films from the 1980's. His films are very colorful and have the spirit of animation like the early days of animation. "Sing Beast Sing" was a seen in the Spike and Mike Sick and Twisted Animation festival in the 1980's.
Finding cels like these fro me are like hoping to catch a big fish over many months!
This cel is from the film "Anijam" (1984) and this particuar sequence was animated by Sally Cruikshank (no relation to Don Shank another top animator). She did the weirdest animation I'd ever seen. She is not afraid to take animation to places like the world of early Betty Boop and Koko the Clown. Her sequence from "Twilight Zone the Movie" has creatures stretching in the most bizarro-toon style this side of Never-Never Wonderland.
Mowgli and Baloo Bear from "Jungle Book" (1967). The background has low contrast here. The characters read in silhouette as Baloo is getting a back rub during the song "Bare Necessities" written by the Sherman Brothers. This song was a big hit and is still heard today.
Medusa from "The Rescuers" (1977) Milt Kahl animated this villain. This character was one of the last in the great Disney Villains animated by the last of the nine old men. Here Medusa is talking to her partner, Snoops who is working with an Orpan, a little girl named Penny to get "the Devil's Eye", a diamond that is stuck in an underground cavern.
Brer Fox and Brer Bear from "Song of the South" (1940). Great extreme drawing. Brer Bear really wants to see Brer Rabbit's the laughing place and is expressing it here to the doubtful fox. This may also be Milt Kahl. It's a clean up drawing in pencil, the inkers could trace these drawings on to cells and then paint the colors on back.