Four Color Comics No.480
Illustration Info.
Original Pencils:
Al Hubbard
Original Inks:
All Hubbard
Source:
Dell Comics / Western Publishing
Origin Date:
Jul. 1953
About the illustration
Typically when I do work in Procreate I have the stabilization at max. This time I dropped it down to about 50%. The original illustration and inks by Elias is gritty, dirty and imperfect with very few smooth lines which makes it more of an appropriate style for war comics.
You would be hard pressed to find another illustrator who was accomplished at changing their illustration styles to match the subject matter like Elias.
About Al Hubbard
Al Hubbard (May 26, 1913 – May 30, 1984) was an American comics artist and animator who had worked with Walt Disney Pictures, MGM Studios (Tom and Jerry), Warner Bros. (Sylvester the Cat), and Walter Lantz. He was one of the most prominent artists for the comic books with animation studio-licensed characters published by Western Publishing.
Like his peers, Ken Hultrgen, Jack Bradbury, and Tony Strobl, Hubbard in his early twenties also tried to enter the world of animation. He started his animation career as an inbetweener at the Walt Disney Studios in 1937, but left after the film workers’ strike in 1941, turning his attention to comic book art. He did funny animal art for Better Publications, Rural Home, and ACG, and was also an artist for ACG’s “Spencer Spook” and “Bungle of the Jungle” stories.
Hubbard brought to his new vocation all the experience accumulated in animation: an edgy and fast stroke, versatile and adaptable to different characters and contexts, often difficult to contain within the narrow limits of the cartoons.
In 1942, Hubbard moved to Glendale near Los Angeles, where for nearly ten years he worked at the studio directed by Jim Davis.