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Merchandising: He received a lot of merchandising money, just not from Kodak
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==Merchandising==
==Merchandising==
Beyond print publication, ''The Brownies'' was at least twice adapted to stage plays.<ref name=toonopedia-brownies/> With the rise in popularity of the Brownie characters, these were used in many venues of merchandising, such as games, blocks, cards, dolls, calendars, advertisements, package labels, mugs, plates, flags, soda pop, a slot machine, a bagatelle game and so forth. [[George Eastman]] applied the brand name in promotion of [[Kodak]]'s "[[Brownie (camera)|Brownie Camera]]", but Palmer Cox reportedly never received any money for the commercial use of his work.<ref name=lambiek-cox>{{Cite web|last=Lambiek Comiclopedia|title=Palmer Cox|url=http://lambiek.net/artists/c/cox-palmer.htm}}</ref><ref name=WM>{{Cite web|last=Morgan|first=Wayne|title=Palmer Cox, the Brownie Craze, and the Brownie Camera|url=http://www.phsc.ca/Brownie2007.html}}</ref>
Beyond print publication, ''The Brownies'' was at least twice adapted to stage plays.<ref name=toonopedia-brownies/> With the rise in popularity of the Brownie characters, these were used in many venues of merchandising, such as games, blocks, cards, dolls, calendars, advertisements, package labels, mugs, plates, flags, soda pop, a slot machine, a bagatelle game and so forth. [[George Eastman]] applied the brand name in promotion of [[Kodak]]'s "[[Brownie (camera)|Brownie Camera]]", but Palmer Cox reportedly never received any money from Kodak for the commercial use of his work.<ref name=lambiek-cox>{{Cite web|last=Lambiek Comiclopedia|title=Palmer Cox|url=http://lambiek.net/artists/c/cox-palmer.htm}}</ref><ref name=WM>{{Cite web|last=Morgan|first=Wayne|title=Palmer Cox, the Brownie Craze, and the Brownie Camera|url=http://www.phsc.ca/Brownie2007.html}}</ref>


==Sources==
==Sources==

Revision as of 11:07, 10 January 2023

A Palmer Cox Brownie from Brownies Around the World (1894)

The Brownies is a series of publications by Canadian illustrator and author Palmer Cox, based on names and elements from English traditional mythology and Scottish stories told to Cox by his grandmother. Illustrations with verse aimed at children, The Brownies was published in magazines and books during the late 19th century and early 20th century. The Brownie characters became famous in their day, and were the first North American comic characters to be internationally merchandised.[1]

Characters and story

Brownies are little fairy- or goblin-like creatures who appear at night and make mischief and do helpful tasks. As published by Palmer Cox, they were based on Scottish folktales.[2]

Palmer Cox, Brownies at Home - Twelve Vignettes, c. 1893, NGA 56973

[3]

Publication history

1895 sheet music. Typically of unauthorized merchandising of the era, the appearance of the Brownies characters is similar to but slightly different from Cox's drawings.

The first appearances of Brownie characters in a print publication took place in 1879, but not until the February 1881 issue of Wide Awake magazine were the creatures printed in their final form.[4] The first proper story, The Brownies' Ride, appeared in the February 1883 issue of the children's periodical St. Nicholas Magazine.[5]

Published in 1899, The Brownies Abroad is considered the first Brownie comic strip, though it was mostly a text comic. It didn't utilise speech balloons until the publication The Brownie Clown of Brownie Town of 1908.[6] From 1903, The Brownies appeared as a newspaper Sunday strip for several years.[4]

The first compilation, The Brownies, Their Book, was published in 1887, followed by 16 books in the series until the last in 1918. Palmer Cox died in 1924.

Merchandising

Beyond print publication, The Brownies was at least twice adapted to stage plays.[4] With the rise in popularity of the Brownie characters, these were used in many venues of merchandising, such as games, blocks, cards, dolls, calendars, advertisements, package labels, mugs, plates, flags, soda pop, a slot machine, a bagatelle game and so forth. George Eastman applied the brand name in promotion of Kodak's "Brownie Camera", but Palmer Cox reportedly never received any money from Kodak for the commercial use of his work.[7][8]

Sources

Footnotes
  1. ^ Wood, Carrie (2020). "The Platinum Age: The American Comic Book 1883-1938". In Overstreet, Robert (ed.). The Overstreet Comic Book Price Guide (50 ed.). Gemstone Publishing. p. 325. ISBN 9781603602518.
  2. ^ Yoon, Clara. "The Brownies: A Cartoon and Commercial Craze". PBS: Antique Roadshow. PBS. Retrieved 9 July 2018.
  3. ^ Cox, Palmer. "Brownies at Home - Twelve Vignettes" (c. 1893). Department of Prints and Drawings, ID: NGA 56973. Washington D.C.: National Gallery of Art. 1979.20.25.
  4. ^ a b c The Brownies (1881) at Don Markstein's Toonopedia. Archived from the original on February 22, 2018.
  5. ^ Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon. "The Brownies".
  6. ^ Grand Lodge of British Columbia and Yukon. "Brownies comic strips".
  7. ^ Lambiek Comiclopedia. "Palmer Cox".
  8. ^ Morgan, Wayne. "Palmer Cox, the Brownie Craze, and the Brownie Camera".

Main books

Other