06 July 2018

Friday Fun & Games - ID'37

Currently cut off from our archives and primary tools, we're going very simple for today's edition of


Let's jump back 81 years for a 4th Of July puzzle page from the Oakland Tribune:


Don't worry, the 11 July edition is on-hand for the answers in tomorrow's Saturday Solutions.

puzzle from Oakland Tribune (1937)
yeah, i know i'm not supposed to tell today, but it was kind of why we're here, so...

05 July 2018

Read Your Vegetables

While i have made mention of my favorite underground artist team - the Overland Vegetable Stagecoach - it recently hurt my brain to realize that we've only had a single feature on Dave Sheridan, and only a single page of Fred Schrier's work.

Let us fix that, shall we?


Due to the Id-based nature of such trips, much of today's post has been split to our back room for adult content, The Other Voice Of ODD! Unlike most such posts, the back room version of this post does not include most of the stories presented here. It does feature the story above, The Fun House, and The Line (presented below with black bars) with the uncensored page, as well as The Sex Evulsors Of Technicus. Please visit the other version of this post to enjoy those tales.









(This page has been lightly censored. Not redacted, or any other BS way of avoiding saying censorship.
Unexpurgated version available on the back room version of this post.)


When previously we saw Fred Schrier's artwork, he showed us How To Build A Time Machine. Next time we visit, he'll show us how travel in one.

pages from Balloon Vendor # 1 (1971), Meef # 1 (1973), Mother's Oats #s 1-3 (1969, 1971, 1977)

04 July 2018

Artist Arcana Mysteriosa

One of the great Oddities to emerge from the classic days of Heavy Metal magazine was the previously mentioned series, Tex Arcana, and its mysterious creator, John Findley.

I'd like to tell you a bit about Findley, but nobody seems to know anything. Tex Arcana is nearly his only known work (there was something in Canine/Feline Classics #25, but i've never seen it and the Grand Comics Database doesn't know it exists), but clearly the man has done some other drawing in his life. The detailed inks on (most of) Tex Arcana brought words like "insane" to the mind of my younger self when first viewing the work. A glorious, painstaking, and beautiful insane - the mind boggles at the thought of how much work went into some pages. But this work seems to have sprung fully formed from the aether. Even the "Official Tex Arcana Website" lists nothing but the books, only acknowledging Findley's existence with a copyright notice.

As to the odd nature of the story...

Quite happily, the first several episodes which i had been prepping were on one of the data sticks when the system erupted and died, and so they're easily accessible. Here's the first dozen pages (two 6 page chapters), including the previously seen page from last week's Friday Fun & Games. Now with context, my comments on the page might make a bit more sense:



Some would say we haven't gotten to the odd bits yet.

the works by "John Findley" for Heavy Metal (March, April 1981)

03 July 2018

OXO, More On

Continuing from last night's post, here's another trio of OXO Liebig collectors cards:

European Cities & Costumes (circa 1887):



Parrots & Cocatiels (?):


The Rat's Daughter (1903):

artists unknown (1887, 1903, ?)