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Showing posts with label Wall Disney. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wall Disney. Show all posts

Monday, August 9, 2010

Wall Disney Princess Cartoon Design







Wall Disney Princess Cartoon Design
The perfect place to practice a waltz, not to mention trying on all those glass slippers. If you are creating a chair rail with paint, paint that first. Mark five sections with a pencil across the wall 1/3 high. Tape a string at one end of the wall and overly it on the pencil marks stretching it horizontally to the other end of the wall and tape. Stand back and visual review the string line to make sure it's straight. Adjust line if necessary. Using the string as a guide, align painters tape across the wall. Repeat the instructions 3 inches below the tape line.

Then use the Disney Princess Stencil from Imperial in CINDERELLAS BALL GOWN to create the pattern within the rectangles. To do so mark, mark the center of the panels, paint one stencil length. Then, depending on available space, add full or partial stencil lengths on either side of the center stencil. Add one stencil on top and below the center stencil.

Mickey Mouse Wall Disney Cartoon Series






Mickey Mouse Wall Disney Cartoon Series
Mickey Mouse is a cartoon character who has become an icon for the Walt Disney Company. Mickey Mouse was created in 1928 by Walt Disney and Ub Iwerks and voiced by Walt Disney. The Walt Disney Company celebrates his birth as November 18, 1928 upon the release of Steamboat Willie, although Mickey had already appeared six months earlier in Plane Crazy (Steamboat Willie being the first Mickey Mouse Cartoon with sound). The anthropomorphic mouse has evolved from being simply a character in animated cartoons and comic strips to become one of the most recognizable symbols in the world. Mickey is currently the main character in the Disney Channel's Playhouse Disney series "Mickey Mouse Clubhouse". Mickey is the leader of The Mickey Mouse Club.

Mickey's top trademark is his ears, and they have also become a trademark of the Disney company in general. Basic design of Mickey's ears is two very round ears that are attached to a very round head. Other than the 1940s Mickey, he and Minnie's ears have had the unusual characteristic of always being viewable with the same symmetry despite which direction that their respective head is facing. In other words, the ears are always generally in the same position as they are in a frontal view of the character, and appear to be sideways on their head when facing left or right.

A large part of Mickey's screen persona is his famously shy, falsetto voice. From his first speaking role in The Karnival Kid onward, Mickey was voiced by Walt Disney himself, a task in which Disney took great personal pride. (Carl Stalling and Clarence Nash allegedly did some uncredited ADR for Mickey in a few early shorts as well.) However, by 1946, Disney was becoming too busy with running the studio to do regular voice work (and it is speculated his cigarette habit had damaged his voice over the years), and during the recording of the Mickey and the Beanstalk section of Fun and Fancy Free, Mickey's voice was handed over to veteran Disney musician and actor Jimmy MacDonald.
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