About give-aways and photostats
Daniel van Eijmeren
daniel at maisie.ow.nl
Sun Sep 17 19:29:56 CEST 1995
Hi all!
This message contains a conversation which I had with Don in private
mail, it is about the problems publishers seems to have with
reprinting Barks' give-away stories.
I'm sending this to the club, because this subject might be too
interesting to keep in private mail.
For those who don't know: In the 40's Barks made also stories which
didn't appear in the regular comics. They appeared in comics called
"give-aways", these were comics which were given away by companies as
promotion. Examples of these stories are "Darkest Africa", "Race to
the South Seas" and "Donald Duck's Atom Bomb".
The last two decades the stories were reprinted *redrawn* (by other
artists), because there seem to be problems with reprinting the
original art. As what I am told this is because the original art and
the photostats of (most of) these stories are lost.
I asked Don why they didn't work from xeroxes of the original comics.
-------------------- Beginning of forwarded messages ------------------
From: Daniel van Eijmeren
To: donrosa at iglou.com (Don Rosa)
Subject: Give-aways
Date sent: Thu, 14 Sep 1995 17:48:28
Hi Don,
I have a question to you about the CBL-reprints of Barks' give-away
stories. I've also asked it on the club, but then no one replied. I'm
asking this to you, because you might know a lot about the
reproduction techniques of Another Rainbow / Gladstone.
Why didn't the CBL use the original art of the give-aways? I've heard
that the photostats of the stories are lost, but why didn't they make
a reproduction of the original give-away comic?
It might be a problem that these comics contain colours, but I know
of xeroxers which have the possibility to leave colours out of the
xerox (so you get only the black lines). Harry has (or had) one at his
work, and the xeroxes he made with it looked quite good. So this is
why I think that it's not that impossible to make a good reproduction.
I'm even thinking that Another Rainbow did use reproductions of comics
(instead of photostats) in the CBL, so that's also why I'm wondering
why they didn't do that with the give-aways.
At first I thought that they didn't make a reproduction, because it
was far more easier to use the redrawn versions which were already
ready to print. So I thought it was lazyness. But the redrawn
versions have the original balloons pasted in their art, and I
certainly don't call all that work on pasting being lazy!
Now I'm thinking of the possibility that they only used the balloons
because these didn't contain colours (so it isn't very difficult to
make a black-and-white reproduction). Do editors still have problems
with coloured art, despite the existance of the xeroxer I mentioned?
I hope you can answer these questions.
Greetings,
--- Daniel
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date sent: Fri, 15 Sep 95 07:53 EDT
To: Daniel van Eijmeren <daniel at maisie.ow.nl>
From: donrosa at iglou.com (Don Rosa)
Subject: Re: Give-aways
They seem to need to work from photostats and not xeroxes.
Whatever method you might use on a common copier to get the colors to
drop out either isn't suitable or not as successful as you believe --
all I know is it won't work for the system they use to print comics
or books. This must be true since I know of a guy who has even
copywrited a system for dropping colors off a comic page for B&W
repro and if it was easy to do correctly on a simple copy machine,
this wouldn't be necessary.
Anyway, the only acceptable way to get a good B&W copy of old
colored comic art is to cut the comic into individual pages and soak
eachpage in a solution which bleaches out all but the black ink. This
obviously RUINS the comic, and no one is willing to do that to a MARCH
OF COMICS issue that has a current "value" of around $5000.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Daniel van Eijmeren
To: donrosa at iglou.com (Don Rosa)
Subject: More give-aways
Date sent: Sat, 16 Sep 1995 17:52:50
Hi Don!
Your answer about the giveaways was very interesting. I've still
some questions: Isn't it also possible to soak away colours from
colour-xeroxes? And what is exactly a photostat?
BTW. This is going on in private mail, but maybe you allow me to send
your previous answer to the club? Maybe others would also like to
know about it.
Greetings,
--- Daniel
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Date sent: Sun, 17 Sep 95 09:16 EDT
To: Daniel van Eijmeren <daniel at maisie.ow.nl>
From: donrosa at iglou.com (Don Rosa)
Subject: Re: More give-aways
A photostat is really just a photo. It's done on a huge
expensive machine which has the camera mounted pointing down at a flat
surface with lotsa guide-marks on it, and the camera can enlarge or
shrink the photo and keep the whole flat sheet in perfact (?) focus
and so forth. A Xerox or any copy-machine is really just an invention
for making really, really cheap photostat-type shots. Actually, on
modern copiers, I've found that a very carefully done Xerox from a
extremely good (i.e. big and expensive) Xerox machine is BETTER than a
photostat. Even photostats are a little blurry if they aren't done
very carefully. When I personally supervize my copy-store people, they
can make perfect Xerox copies.
I don't know about soaking color out of color copies -- it
sounds like it would not give the quality that is needed.
I think the Digest has already discussed this, but you can
post all this there if you wish. Somebody there probably knows much
more than I do about this subject.
--------------------------- End --------------------------------------
Is there someone who can add his/her two cents to this?
Greetings,
--- Daniel
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