Posts Tagged ‘birthday’

Traditional Hand-Knitted Baby Blankets

Sunday, January 8th, 2012

What can you give the parents of a new-born baby who have everything? Parents who have already had a baby or two will already have objects like a crib, baby’s clothes, a pram and most other things, but the one present that is always appreciated is a personalized or handmade knitted blanket. Home knitted baby blankets are much better than shop-purchased baby blankets and can either be passed down or kept to give to the baby twenty years later as an heirloom.

Up until fifty years ago, many people, such as aunts and grandmothers knitted and it was fairly common to see hand-knitted baby blankets. This all but died out in the Seventies, Eighties and Nineties, but handcrafts have seen a resurgence in the new millennium. This has to be a positive sign. Coupled with this is the fact that contemporary wools, yarns and other fibres are more sturdy and safer than ever before.

This means that a hand-knitted baby blanket is a better gift than ever before. There are dozens of colours and textures which makes it easy for the knitter to match any theme that the parents might have decided on for the baby’s nursery.

A hand-knitted quilt or blanket is a very special present which can either be passed down to the next baby or can be put away to be a present for the ‘baby’ at a later date, in the same way that a bride may put away her bridal gown for her daughter if she ever has one.

Whilst you are deciding on a design for your baby blanket, you ought to make safety your prime consideration. That ought to include thought for the size or the blanket. The blanket has to fit the cot exactly so that there are no dangerous folds or gaps. The weave should also be tight enough so that small fingers and toes cannot get caught up in them.

It is not a good idea to have beads sewn into the blanket either. That is because babies soon start teething and you do not want your baby to bite off a few beads and choke on them. Traditionally, parents used blue colours for a boy baby and pink for a girl and although this distinction blurred for a few decades it is being respected again so you will have to find out the sex of the baby - subtly if the knitted blanket is going to be a surprise present.

There is no parent in the world that would not treasure a hand-knitted blanket or quilt for their new baby. It is a very extraordinary present that really will be considered as an heirloom to be passed down through the family or kept as a very extraordinary twenty-first birthday present. Embroider your name in a corner so that the person you gifted it to will always remember you as well.

Owen Jones, the writer of this article, writes on a number of subjects, but is now concerned with Marriott bedding. If you would like to know more, please visit our website at Modern Throw Pillows For Sale.

Baby Cribs, Cots And Blankets

Tuesday, July 26th, 2011

It is vital for everyone, even babies, to have somewhere safe and secure to sleep. I say ‘even babies’ because it is simple to think that babies are not quite conscious, but closer contact makes the observer soon comprehend that babies have a sense of security. For example, they might cry if one stranger approaches and smile if a different one comes near. A bit like animals, they have instincts.

Well, they are animals and so are we adults, so that should not come as much of a surprise either. Babies require warmth and softness and something akin to a nest. Naturally, parents have realized this for thousands of generations and the way we have dealt with that need for thousands of years is by wrapping babies up and putting them in cribs or cots.

In other words somewhere safe and secure. Even though they do not know it, they have a feeling that they are in a walled enclosure where animals cannot see them easily and they cannot drop out of either. a crib or cot allows a baby to sleep comfortably as if it is hidden from danger.

However, as they get older, they become more adventurous, which is exactly why they require ‘walls’ around them, which make them feel safe and frustrated at the same time. This is obviously the time when toddlers are at their most vulnerable, because they want to explore but are not very aware of the dangers of the world. Every parent worries about their children wandering off.

Once a child can walk and climb is the time when it has to be removed from a crib that is off the ground to a safer bed, from which they cannot climb out and fall.

These beds are often called toddlers’ beds, but now the sides have to be high enough for them not to be able to break out of - a type of pen.

Some cribs can be converted and although they might seem more expensive at first, they can be cheaper in the long run.

It is one of the most hazardous times for babies and one of the most worrying times for recent parents too. Putting the toddler’s pen in the parents’ room is an easy trap to fall into, because it can make the eventual necessary break moving the child from the parents’ room to the nursery all the more a problem when the time ultimately comes.

However, that time will come when the child has to sleep in a room of its own either with other brothers and sisters or not, but the fact of the matter is that parents have to have their sleep as well so that they are alert enough to both earn money to support their family and be awake enough to watch over their offspring.

Owen Jones, the author of that article, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with the satin baby blankets. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Woollen Blankets.

What Was Punch Magazine?

Tuesday, July 19th, 2011

In all probability the first name that comes to mind whilst thinking of the history of cartoons is that of Punch.

It was a British weekly magazine of humour and satire published between 1841 and 1992. It was started in July 1841 by Henry Mayhew who, with Mark Lemon, was responsible for the editing, and engraver Ebenezer Landells who took care of the illustrations.

Its initial sub-title was The London Charivari, after a French satirical humour publication known as Le Charivari. Revealing their satiric and humorous intent, the two editors took the name of the anarchic glove puppet, Mr. Punch, of Punch and Judy fame as the title of the new publication.

On the other hand the name is also a play on words regarding the name of the co-editor Mark Lemon, in that “punch is nothing without lemon”. Mayhew did not stay with the publication for long. He ceased being joint editor in 1842 and became “suggestor in chief” until he left in 1845.

Punch was responsible for the word “cartoon” in the sense of a comic drawing. In fact one of its most famous cartoons, drawn by George Du Maurier, the grandfather of the novelist Dame Daphne Du Maurier , gave birth to the phrase ?it is good in parts, like the curate?s egg?. The phrase derives from a cartoon entitled “True Humility”.

It pictured a timid-looking curate taking breakfast in his bishop’s house.The bishop says, “I’m afraid you’ve got a bad egg, Mr Jones.” The curate replies, “Oh, no, my Lord, I assure you that parts of it are excellent!”

However probably its most famous cartoon is entitled ? Dropping the Pilot? . This was a political cartoon by Sir John Tenniel, first published in March 1890. It depicts the German Chancellor Otto von Bismarck, as a shipping pilot, stepping off a ship watched by the German Emperor Wilhelm II. Bismarck had recently resigned as Chancellor at Wilhelm’s insistence.

After a very difficult start with much financial difficulty and lack of market success, Punch became a necessity for British middle class drawing rooms because it not just displayed a sophisticated sense of humour and but did not contain the rude material so ubiquitous in much of the alternative satirical press of the time.

The Times used small parts from Punch as column fillers, giving the publication free publicity and indirectly conferring a degree of respectability, However respectability was truly achieved when it was learned that Queen Victoria and Prince Albert were to be discovered amongst it readership.

The circulation of Punch peaked during the 1940s at 175,000 but thereafter fell into deterioration, until in 1992 ,after 150 years the publication was forced to close.

In 1996, the Egyptian businessman Mohamed Al-Fayed became tired of the numerous criticisms he had to endure from the publication Private Eye and bought the rights to the Punch name with a view to using it to combat his antagonist. He relaunched it later that year, but it never achieved any degree of circulation or profitability and in May 2002 it was declared that Punch would at long last close for good

If you want one of our unique, hand-painted, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos suppled by you please click on this link History of Cricket. If you would like to know more, please go to web site at Custom Cartoons.

Simple Suggestions For Baby Showers

Thursday, July 7th, 2011

Baby showers are well-liked events, particularly in America. A baby shower is usually given or hosted by a friend of the expectant mother, usually before the birth but sometimes after it as well. The purpose of the baby shower is to collect presents for the child and its parents, which is why family of the mother find it awkward to organize the baby shower themselves - it looks too much like begging.

If you can get a friend to arrange a baby shower for you or if someone offers to do it, the invitations should be sent out a month or two before the birth day, so that the mother is not in too much discomfort and is not likely to drop the baby during the party.

It is nice to have handmade baby shower invitations. There are two ways that you can do this: either design the invitation card yourself and have it printed out or select a template at the printers. Both ideas give satisfactory results.

If you have the invitations printed to a standard size, you can buy cheap envelopes at a budget stationery office, but if you go for some weird size, ask the printer to provide the envelopes too.

Standard details like the date, the time, the venue, your name and the baby’s name can all be printed but you will have to write or type the recipient’s name in personally. Add your phone number too so that people can ask questions if they have any. If you would like the party (and the presents) to have a theme, you ought to state that on the invitation. Perhaps the card could be in the same theme too.

In fact, if you want to go down that route, you could download a fitting image off the Internet, say, a scene from Peter Rabbit, and give that to the printer so that they can print that onto your card.

People are very busy these days, so make sure you give your friends at least a month to book you in and get a fitting gift for the shower. If you would like to be pretty certain how many guests are coming, enclose a stamped, self-addressed postcard in with the invitation, so that they can let you know easily.

If you are looking for items to do during the party, you could get people to suggest names for your baby and guess the sex or weight of it as well. You could use a cross on a chain as a pendant to see if it the movement predicts a boy or girl and how many individuals get the same movement. You could also discuss themes for the child’s nursery after it is born, one for if it is a boy and one for if it is a boy.

Owen Jones, the author of that piece, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now concerned with the satin baby blankets. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Woollen Blankets.

Sewing Beautiful Traditional Quilts

Wednesday, June 29th, 2011

One of the fantastic things about sewing quilts is the tradition behind quilt making and the usefulness of the final product. It is really nice to have a hobby that can improve your life by either being functional or by being saleable.

One of the other good things about quilt making is that it is so versatile. If there is more than one way to skin a cat, there are thousands of ways of making a quilt.

Patch work quilts are one of the most beautiful and traditional quilts to use to keep you warm at night. They are also one of the cheapest ways of sewing a quilt, but they are not the easiest of quilts to start with. Matching all the squares in a patch work quilt is not quite as easy as it seems. The easiest way to start is to purchase two large squares of cloth that you like.

However, there is a great tradition in Europe and America of sewing patch work quilts. The craft of doing this has even become a social gathering in the United States. If you would like to get started sewing patch work quilts, you could join a group if you live in America or you could join an Internet group that specializes in making quilts. Do a search on line and you will find what you are searching for.

There is such a great deal of scope if you want to create a quilt. For example, you could create the top of the quilt either completely smooth or totally fluffy or totally smooth or a mixture of all or some of them. Then you can have the underside as a extraordinary fabric too or you could just use a sheet or preferably something a bit more rugged.

If you are thoroughly intimidated by the idea of sewing a full-size quilt, you could try constructing a quilt for a baby. Okay, you might not have a baby and you might definitely not be planning having one, but you could create one for the practice and keep it to give to a special person in your life who is having a baby or only sell it through a local shop or even eBay.

Once you are confident about making and selling quilts for babies’ cots or toddlers’ beds, you could upgrade them a bit and offer to embroider your name and the baby’s name on the quilt. Later still, you could accept orders for custom quilts, made to the desires of the orderer.

Constructing quilts, especially babies’ quilts is a decent way of making money from home for people who cannot leave home a great deal. Those people such as work at home mothers and fathers, the elderly and the unwell.

Owen Jones, the author of that article, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with the chenille throw blankets. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Woollen Blankets.

Celebrated British Caricaturists - Part One

Wednesday, May 11th, 2011

This list includes both British born artists and those who were born elsewhere but did the majority of their most important work in the U.K. The assortment is listed in chronological order by date of birth.

William Hogarth (1697 - 1764)

He was born in London and apprenticed to an engraver where he studied his trade. He became a painter, printmaker, pictorial satirist, social critic and editorial cartoonist and has been accredited with pioneering sequential art or the cartoon strip.

His output ranged from realistic portraiture to comic strip-like series of pictures known as “modern moral subjects”. His most famous works are no doubt ? The Harlot?s Progress and ?The Rake?s Progress?.

Isaac Cruickshank ( 1756 - 1811)

Cruickshank was a Scottish painter and caricaturist who was born in Edinburgh. Cruikshank’s first known publications were etchings of Edinburgh “types”, from 1784.

His water colours were exhibited, but in order to make a living it was found that it was more profitable to produce prints and caricatures. He was responsible in part for creating the figure of John Bull, the nationalistic representation of a solid British yeoman.

Isaac Cruikshank was a contemporary of James Gillray and Thomas Rowlandson, and he was part of what has been known as “the Golden Age of British Caricature.

Thomas Rowlandson ( 1756 - 1827)

Thomas Rowlandson was an English painter and caricaturist. He was born in London and when he finished school he studied at the Royal Academy. He was thought of as a promising student and if he had sustained his early diligence he would have made his mark as an artist.

But he inherited ?7,000 from a French aunt and dived into the dissipations of the town (he was known to sit at the gambling-table for 36 hours at a stretch).

He quickly squandered his inheritance but the friendship and examples of James Gillray and Henry William Bunbury seem to have suggested caricature as a means of filling his stomach and purse.

He also created a collection of erotic prints and woodcuts, lots of which would these days be thought of as pornographic .

James Gillray (1757 - 1815)

James Gillray was a British caricaturist and printmaker who gained great fame for his etched political and social satires, mainly in print between 1792 and 1810.

Some of his most well known caricatures were aimed at at the Royal Family and George III in particular. He is also responsible for almost certainly the most famous political cartoon of all time.

It was entitled ?The Plum Pudding in Danger? . It was printed in 1805 and depicts Pitt and Napoleon carving up the plum pudding of Europe.

By 1811, madness, no doubt made worse by his intemperate life-style, was overtaking him and he passed away in 1815.

George Cruickshank ( 1792 - 1878)

George Cruickshank was born in London, the son of the famous caricaturist Isaac Cruickshank and started his working career as apprentice to his father.

He later started out as a caricaturist in his own right and was even paid ?100 in return for a promise not to satirize George IV In later life he turned to book illustrating and illustrated ?Sketches by Boz? and ?Oliver Twist? for Charles Dickens.

After creating palsy he died in 1878. Punch in his obituary said ?There never was a purer, simpler, more straightforward or altogether more blameless man. His nature had something childlike in its transparency.”

If you want one of our unique, hand-painted, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos supplied by you please click on one of these links History Of Rugby. If you would like to know more, please go to our web site at Custom Cartoons.

A Crocheted Baby’s Blanket - The Perfect Present For Babies

Sunday, May 8th, 2011

Whether your friends, the parents-to-be, are going to be parents for the first time or the n-th time, it is a problem to know that what you are buying for the child is not going to be a duplicate. An added complication is that not all parents-to-be would like to know the sex of their new baby, so it is fairly hard to get a present for the baby shower or Christening (or whatever) and still feel confident that it will be valued.

However, there are some presents that are unlikely to be duplicated and without having to spend an absolute fortune, a crocheted baby’s blanket is one of them. If you have already gained the skills to make a crocheted baby’s blanket, then all well and good, otherwise you have two alternatives: you can either learn and thereby increase your number of skills or you can pay for one.

Forty years ago and before, most women could knit and crochet and knew about yarns and threads and knitting needles. Regrettably, the parents of the Seventies either did not learn these skills or did not pass them on in general, but knitting and crocheting are making quite a comeback now in the early Twenty-First Century. People are proud to own hand-made items like crocheted baby’s blankets.

One of the advantages of using modern yarns and materials is that the dyes are probable to be less dangerous than before, but you will still have to buy them from trustworthy suppliers to be absolutely certain.

Another benefit of a handmade item like a crocheted baby’s blanket is that is likely to become a family heirloom. A handmade crocheted baby’s blanket is sure to be appreciated because it was handmade and not shop-purchased. It is even better if the maker’s name and the baby’s name are embroidered on it as well.

If you are a greenhorn to crocheting a baby’s blanket, there are a few items that you need to keep in mind with regard to the baby’s safety.

Firstly, pick a tightly-knit pattern so that the baby’s fingers and toes cannot get snarled up in the blanket. Secondly, the fabric or yarn ought to be soft, colour-fast, non-toxic and machine washable. Babies’ blankets get dirty quite frequently, so it really is a boon to have a baby’s blanket that is machine washable.

Thirdly, take the time to ask the parents-to-be if they have a colour scheme or theme in mind for the nursery. Fourthly, the blanket should be the right size. If your crocheted baby’s blanket is to be used in a cot, then it should be the exact same size of the cot for safety reasons. If it is to be a general blanket, then you can make it larger so that it can be useful for longer.

Lastly, but not least crucial is to take into account that babies teethe, so do not incorporate anything into your handmade crocheted baby’s blanket if there is a chance of the baby choking on it, beads are a distinct no-no.

Owen Jones, the writer of that article, writes on a variety of topics, but is now involved with the chenille throw blankets. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Woollen Blankets.

Thoughts On Baby Gift Baskets

Sunday, April 10th, 2011

Are you going to give a baby shower soon? Or have you recently been invited to one and you are not certain what to do? If so, you will be expected to give a gift to the baby to help welcome him or her into the world. This is fine, but a great deal of people, especially single men, ask themselves what it is precisely that a baby so urgently needs.

If you fall into that category or if you want to take a scatter-gun approach to giving a present in the hope that something will be of use, then you could think about procuring the baby a baby gift basket. You see, a baby gift basket contains a lot of small objects or big objects or a mixture of the two. Whatever you can come up with or afford really.

There are two ways of getting a baby gift basket. You can either purchase one taylor-made or you can purchase a basket and pick-and-mix the contents yourself. So, let us suppose that you are going to avoid duplication and fill your own basket.

To begin with the basket. A traditional wicker basket like the ones they show on toffee tins, in which a maid is carrying eggs is pretty, but also pretty expensive. You could obtain a plastic version, but maybe the box that the gifts are in is not as significant as the gifts themselves. You could make your own by lining and wrapping a suitably-sized box and finishing it with a bow.

The contents. What do babies need? Or are you going to put some items in there for the parents too? If you are going to add a couple of objects for the parents as well, I will leave that up to you as you know them better than I do, I would imagine.

What can you buy for the baby then? Something instructive is a necessity; something to occupy the baby’s attention, maybe like a mobile or a decorative abacus to string across the pram. How about music? Brahm’s Lullaby is excellent, with or without voices, in German or in English, but get it sung by a choir or a solo, but professionally-trained singer - not Lady Gaga.

When selecting music remember that by the time the baby can understand the words, the CD will have been lost, scratched or worn out. Go for peaceful music, classical is best in this case.

Other objects that always come in useful are bibs, teething rings, baby beakers and a small plate or dish. I do not think it is a good idea to do to get shampoos and soaps, it is better to let mum purchase them or you may be blamed for allergic reactions and dandruff. However, talcum powder is a fairly safe bet, but do not buy anything strongly perfumed.

Personalized bedding is a good notion. If you buy a cot blanket, try to get one the same size as the cot for safety reasons. A lovely touch is to have the baby’s monogram or initials embroidered on it. That does not work well for clothing, because kids grow out of them, but it is great for quilts and pillow cases.

Buy the bedding and ask (or pay) someone to do the embroidery for you. The child will grow out of the cot, but the blanket can then be used as a comforter. Embroidered pillow cases have a similarly long life.

Some people give sweets and biscuits, but personally I am not in favour of helping someone to rot their teeth, encouraging a sweet tooth or overweight babies. A good bottle of wine though is another matter, but you will need to take advice on whether it will be at its peak in twenty years time. Good Port is a safe bet. Spirits do not mature in a bottle.

Owen Jones, the author of that article, writes on a variety of subjects, but is now involved with the satin baby blankets. If you want to know more, please visit our website at Woollen Blankets.

Where Did Caricatures Originate?

Tuesday, November 16th, 2010

A caricature is a portrait, painting or cartoon that exaggerates or distorts certain features of a person or item to generate an easily identifiable visual similarity.

Caricatures can be discourteous or complimentary and can serve a political point or be drawn solely for entertainment. Caricatures of politicians are commonly used in editorial cartoons, whereas caricatures of movie stars are often found in entertainment magazines.

The term is derived from the Italian caricare- to charge or load. So, the word “caricature” essentially says a “loaded portrait”. Strictly speaking , the term refers just to depictions of real-life people, and not to cartoon fabrications of fictional characters.

However the world-renowned animator Walt Disney claimed that his animation work could be likened to caricature, saying the hardest thing to do was find the caricature of an animal that worked best as a human-like character.

One of the earliest instances of a caricature has been discovered in the ruins of Pompeii where a graffiti caricature of a politician had been etched into a wall.

Moving forward nearly 1500 years but staying in Italy, Leonardo da Vinci was an active exponent of the art. He actually sought out people with some form of deformity to use as models.

The point of a caricature was to offer an impression of the original which was more memorable than a portrait. Diodemmar Casem, one of the great early exponents, claimed to be able to sum up a person in ? three or four strokes of the pen?.

Caricature experienced its first successes in the closed aristocratic circles of France and Italy, where such portraits would be passed about for mutual enjoyment.

Mary Darley was one of the first professional caricaturists in England and around 1762 published the first book of caricature drawing in England - A Book of Caricaturas

However, the two greatest exponents of the art of the caricature in the 18th century were Thomas Rowlandson and James Gillray. Their styles of output were in great contrast. Rowlandson was the more artistic of the two and took his inspiration from the public at large.

Gillray, on the other hand, was more interested in the political arena and used his art to satirize political life. Being contemporaries they became big friends and used to spend a lot of time getting drunk in the pubs of London.

In drawing a caricature the caricaturist can choose to either subtly mock or cruelly wound his topic. Drawing caricatures can merely be a form of entertainment and amusement ? in which case gentle mockery is in order ? or the art can be employed to make a serious social or political objective.

A caricaturist draws on (1) the natural characteristics of the subject (the big ears, long nose, etc.); (2) the acquired individuality (stoop, scars, facial lines etc.); and (3) the vanities (choice of hair style, glasses, clothes, expressions and mannerisms).

Although caricaturists like Gillray raised a great deal of controversy in the 18th century by their portrayal of the Royal family and especially George III, it was nothing compared to the present day pandemonium in the Muslim world brought about by cartoons caricaturing the prophet Mohammed. So the modern day caricaturist continues in the satirical mode of his illustrious antecedents.

If you want one of our unique, hand-painted, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos suppled by you please click on this link Formula One. If you would like to know more, please go to web site at Custom Cartoons.

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A Brief History Of Animated Cartoons

Friday, November 12th, 2010

An animated cartoon is a short, hand-drawn (or created with computers to look something like something hand-drawn) film for the films, tv or computer screen, featuring some kind of story or plot (even if it is a very short one).

Animation itself can be described as the rapid showing of a sequence of images of 2-D or 3-D artwork or model positions in order to create an illusion of movement. The effect is an optical illusion of motion due to the phenomenon of persistence of vision, and can be created and demonstrated in several ways.

It is hard to believe but the very earliest instances of attempts to capture the impression of motion by drawing can be found in Paleolithic cave paintings. Here animals are depicted with multiple legs in superimposed positions, clearly attempting to express the perception of motion.

Further examples can be seen on an earthenware bowl more than 5,000 years old from Iran and an Egyptian mural of wrestlers in action, which is about 4,000 years old.

However these examples cannot certainly be described as animation as there was no means of making the objects actually move.

The first mechanical devices designed to provide the illusion of movement were developed for children?s amusement or as entertainment at private parties. These included the zoetrope, magic lantern, praxinoscope, thaumatrope, phenakistoscope, and flip book.

Charles-Emile Reynaud created the first animated film in 1892 while he exhibited an animated film consisting of loops of around 500 frames. This film is also outstanding as the first known example of film perforations being used. His films were not recorded, but drawn directly onto the transparent strip.

However the first film which can truly be called an animated cartoon was ‘Humorous Phases of Funny Faces’ fashioned by J. Stuart Blackton in 1906. It features a cartoonist drawing faces on a chalkboard, and the faces apparently coming to life.

One of the very first successful animated cartoons was “Gertie the Dinosaur” (1914) by Winsor McCay. It is thought of as the first example of real character animation.

All the major movie studios used animated cartoons of 5 to 10 minute lengths as ?fillers? before the main movie was shown during the period of the 1930s to the 1960s.Theatrical cartoons were made in huge numbers and MGM, Disney, Paramount and Warner Brothers were the largest studios producing these 5 to 10-minute “shorts”.

However the ever blossomingh popularity of TV and the subsequent waning in cinema going has meant that today most animated cartoons are produced for television.

The most famous animated cartoon character of all is no doubt Mickey Mouse who was introduced to the world by Walt Disney in May 1928 in Plane Crazy but also starred some six months later in the first animated cartoon with sound - ‘Steamboat Willie’.

Incidentally, Mickey was initially christened Mortimer Mouse until Walt Disney?s wife persuaded him to make the transformation.

Mickey Mouse, predated by another cartoon animal called Felix The Cat, made his debut in 1919. However another all time favourite cartoon series Tom and Jerry had to wait until 1931 to put in an appearance.

All these characters and numerous more have long since made the transition from movies to television where, no doubt, they will be seen for many years to come.

If you want one of our unique, hand-made, custom cartoons or caricatures from photos suppled by you please click on one of these links History of Football. If you would like to know more, please go to website at Custom Cartoons.