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  2. Coloring book - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coloring_book

    Coloring book. A coloring book (British English: colouring-in book, colouring book, or colouring page) is a type of book containing line art to which people are intended to add color using crayons, colored pencils, marker pens, paint or other artistic media. Traditional coloring books and coloring pages are printed on paper or card.

  3. Picture Pages - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Picture_Pages

    Picture Pages. Animated intro, featuring a caricature of Bill Cosby. Picture Pages is a 1978–1984 American educational television program aimed at preschool children, presented by Bill Cosby —teaching lessons on basic arithmetic, geometry, word association and drawing through a series of interactive lessons that used a workbook that viewers ...

  4. Comics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comics

    Pierre Fresnault-Deruelle then took a semiotics approach to the study of comics, analyzing text–image relations, page-level image relations, and image discontinuities, or what Scott McCloud later dubbed "closure". [109] In 1987, Henri Vanlier introduced the term multicadre, or "multiframe", to refer to the comics page as a semantic unit. [110]

  5. Keep On Truckin' (comics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keep_On_Truckin'_(comics)

    Keep On Truckin ' is a one-page cartoon by Robert Crumb, published in the first issue of Zap Comix in 1968. A visual burlesque of the lyrics of the Blind Boy Fuller song "Truckin' My Blues Away", it consists of an assortment of men, drawn in Crumb's distinctive style, strutting across various landscapes. The cartoon's images were imitated and ...

  6. Glossary of comics terminology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glossary_of_comics_terminology

    A gag cartoon (a.k.a. panel cartoon or gag panel) is most often a single-panel cartoon, usually including a hand-lettered or typeset caption beneath the drawing. A pantomime cartoon carries no caption. In some cases, dialogue may appear in speech balloons, following the common convention of comic strips.

  7. Doraemon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Doraemon

    The Doraemons. A timeline of magazines in which the manga's chapters (blue) or its long stories (red) were published [3][4] Doraemon (ドラえもん) is a Japanese manga series written and illustrated by Fujiko F. Fujio. First serialized in 1969, the manga's chapters were collected in 45 tankōbon volumes published by Shogakukan from 1974 to 1996.