Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Celebrities - Barks Carl
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 2     21-40 of 72    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Barks Carl:     more books (103)
  1. Uncle Scrooge #381 (Uncle Scrooge (Graphic Novels)) (v. 381) by Carl Barks, Kari Korhonen, et all 2008-11-05
  2. Walt Disney's Christmas Parade #5 (Walt Disney's Parade) (v. 5) by Carl Barks, Pat and Shelly Block, et all 2008-12-03
  3. The Carl Barks Library of Walt Disney's Comics and Stories in Color # 4 (Walt Disneys Comics and Stories by Carl Barks, 4) by Carl Barks, 1992
  4. Walt Disney's Comics And Stories #697 (v. 697) by Carl Barks, Noel Van Horn, et all 2008-11-19
  5. Disney Presents Carl Barks' Greatest Ducktales Stories Volume 1 by Carl Barks, 2006-05-24
  6. Carl Barks and the Art of the Comic Book by Michael Barrier, 1982-08
  7. Barks Comics and Stories 08. ( Band 22 - 24). by Walt Disney, Carl Barks, 2002-12-01
  8. Walt Disney's Comics and Stories (The Carl Barks Library Of Walt Disney's Comics And Stories In Color, 8) by Carl Barks, 1990
  9. Donald Duck Family - The Daan Jippes Collection (Volume 1) by Carl Barks, Daan Jippes, 2008-07-16
  10. Uncle Scrooge #361 (Uncle Scrooge (Graphic Novels)) (No. 361) by Carl Barks, Peter Hardfeldt, et all 2006-12-28
  11. Walt Disney's Comics And Stories #692 by Carl Barks, Pat McGreal, et all 2008-06-18
  12. The Carl Barks library of 1940s Donald Duck Christmas giveaways: Christmas stories by Carl Barks : Walt Disney's Donald Duck by Carl Barks, 1992
  13. Walt Disney's Spring Fever Volume 2 (v. 2) by Carl Barks, Sarah Kinney, et all 2008-06-04
  14. Donald Duck: Walt Disney by Carl Barks, 1989-08-09

21. Carl Barks
A cyberspace tribute to carl barks, creator of Scrooge McDuck, his oil paintings and limited edition prints.
http://www.geocities.com/~jimlowe/barks/barksdex.html
The "Good" Duck Artist
Mr. Barks passed away on August 25, 2000, at the age of 99.
IMPORTANT: An improved version of this site has been established elsewhere. Since the version at this address will be removed, it is recommended that you go to the new version and change your "favorite place" or "bookmark" accordingly.
Carl Barks, the genius behind the creation of "Scrooge McDuck," the world's richest duck , and the man who drew the comic book adventures of Donald Duck, his nephews, and Uncle Scrooge back in the '40s, '50s and '60s is the subject of this page. The remarkable Mr. Barks celebrated his 96th birthday at a special celebration presented at Walt Disney World in Orlando, Florida, April 12 and 13, 1997. He is seen here on that occasion with Kathy Morby and Bill Grandey, of the Carl Barks Studio, together with 250 of his closest friends. Information and commentary about Mr. Barks can be found on many web pages other than this one. Try running his name through a search engine or pursue him further via one of the links at the bottom of this page. In addition, a number of books have been written which contain biographical information and a complete survey of his career. Consequently, this page is mostly limited to information regarding the current value of original oil paintings and certain limited edition prints, signed by Mr. Barks. In addition, I hope to be a sort of central point for compiling the opinions of fans regarding which of the famous Barks oil paintings is the "best" one.

22. A Guidebook To The Carl Barks Universe (test)
The definite guide to life and work. By Daniël van Eijmeren, includes a trivia, a gallery and a bibliography.
http://www.seriesam.com/barks/
INDEX ART ANIMATION COMICS CHARACTERS ... Memoriam
INDEX
previous page next page FORUM: McDrake International - Carl Barks
Hosted by:
Movie Posters Sweden
Comic Books Sweden
submit them here
, or mail the maintainer at admin@mcdrake.nl . The site 'A Guidebook to the Carl Barks Universe' is made for educational purposes only, to get people interested in Carl Barks' life and his art. The only relation between SerieSam.com (See " Sources "-section.)
top of this page
previous page next page About this site Memoriam INDEX ART ANIMATION COMICS CHARACTERS ... McDrake International - Carl Barks forum Generated by DVEGEN 4.7 on 2007-09-08

23. Carl Barks
The carl barks Fan Club honors cartoon legend carl barks, creator of the Disney Ducks.
http://www.thecarlbarksfanclub.com/

THE CARL BARKS FAN CLUB
The Carl Barks Fan Club (often called the "CBFC") of Crystal Lake, Illinois, USA, connects fans to a global community of Carl Barks fans. The Carl Barks Fan Club is dedicated to preserving the Barks legacy of stories and artwork for future generations and to promoting the legacy to an ever-widening global audience of Carl Barks fans. But just who is CARL BARKS , you may ask? Well, even if you don't know his name, you're probably familiar with his work. If you've ever seen a cartoon featuring Donald Duck, Scrooge McDuck, or any of the duck clan, then you know the work of Carl Barks. Carl Barks is a Disney Legend and an American cultural icon! His career as both a cartoonist and artist spanned a truly incredible 60+ years. Carl Barks began working for the Walt Disney Studios in 1935 as an “in-betweener” in the Animation Department. Upon leaving the studios in 1942 and until his retirement in 1966, he single-handedly wrote and drew nearly 500 “Duck Stories” for the Disney Comic Books: In his later years, Carl continued to add an exclamation point to his amazing body of work - as a fine artist! Even during his later years, some of Carl’s later oils of the Disney Ducks would command prices in excess of $280,000.

24. Carl Barks - Biography
carl barks on IMDb Movies, TV, Celebs, and more
http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0055119/bio
Now Playing Movie/TV News My Movies DVD New Releases ... search All Titles TV Episodes My Movies Names Companies Keywords Characters Quotes Bios Plots more tips SHOP CARL BARKS DVD VHS CD IMDb ... Carl Barks Biography Quicklinks categorized by type by year by ratings by votes by TV series titles for sale by genre by keyword power search credited with biography other works publicity contact miscellaneous Top Links biography by votes awards news articles ... message board Filmographies categorized by type by year by ratings ... tv schedule Biographical biography other works publicity contact ... message board External Links official sites miscellaneous photographs sound clips ... video clips
Biography for
Carl Barks
advertisement photos board add contact details Date of Birth 27 March Merrill, Oregon, USA Date of Death 25 August , Grants Pass, Oregon, USA (leukemia) Nickname the good artist the Good Duck Artist the duck man the comic book king Mini Biography As the creator of Scrooge McDuck, Carl Barks did more than any other comic book artist to widen the popularity of Donald Duck, bringing in the process a vast array of memorable supporting characters into the Disney universe, among them Uncle Scrooge himself, Gladstone Gander, Gyro Gearloose (and his Little Helper), the Beagle Boys, and the Junior Woodchucks.
His mastery at this is witnessed to by, among others, Newsweek's homage to his artistry and by Time's conclusion that "Scrooge and his creator Carl Barks belong in the great mainstream of American Folklore." Beyond that is the plain fact that he was known to his readers simply as "the good artist" (a descriptor necessary during a time when the Disney company didn't identify any of its cartoonists). His publishers tried in the early '50s to replace him on the 10-page comedies in Walt Disney's Comics and Stories so that he could concentrate on the longer adventure epics in Donald Duck and Uncle $crooge (these were the three titles that contained the bulk of Barks' output through the years); they were promptly flooded with a barrage of pleading and irate letters from readers demanding that "the good artist" be brought back.

25. Carl Barks Biography
An illustrated biography of carl barks. One of 101 biographical pages for illustrators and artists.
http://www.bpib.com/illustra2/barks.htm
Born in Oregon in 1901, Carl Barks was destined to be one of the most popular comic book artists and storytellers in the world. Arguably, he still is. And yet why haven't you heard of him? He was of the generation of Constantin Alajalov, Edward Ardizzone, Boris Artzybasheff , Walt Disney, Robert Fawcett, Al Hirschfeld , Ray Prohaska, Saul Tepper, and Sulamith Wulfing - a generation of great talent and great change. Barks' artistic training consisted of an incomplete mail order course from the Landon School and the ever-changing lessons of the Sunday comics sections of the newspaper. He learned his lessons well, but it wasn't until 1928 that he sold his first cartoons to the Calgary Eye-Opener , a Capt. Billy's Whizbang imitator out of Minneapolis. A few sales to Judge helped convince him that his dream of being an illustrator had merit. In 1930, he moved to Minneapolis and worked as a staff artist and eventually the de facto editor of the Eye-Opener
a sample of an Eye-Opener cartoon circa 1928
from The Unexpurgated Carl Barks
Hamilton Comics In 1935 he applied for a job at the Walt Disney animation studio. He was hired as an in-betweener. That's an artist who has the thankless job of drawing the intervening animation frames that make the action flow smoothly between two drawings that were done by a REAL animator. Needless to say, he was not happy with the work. He had spent five years practically writing and drawing a whole magazine at the

26. Comic-helnwein
The quotations from carl barks contained in this interview are taken from the audiotape interview carl barks conversations / edited by Donald Ault.
http://helnweincomic.homestead.com/carlbarks.html
@import url(http://www.homestead.com/~media/elements/Text/font_styles.css);
Helnwein talks with Carl Barks
July 11th 1992, Oregon
First published in an edited form as "Gespräch mit Carls Barks, (A Conversation with Carl Barks), 11 July 1992, Oregon", in Wer ist Carl Barks
Originally translated from the German by Roswitha Mueller, revised by Gottfried Helnwein. The quotations from Carl Barks contained in this interview are taken from the audiotape interview as transcribed by the Helnwein Studio and are thus Barks's original words.
Barks and Helnwein. Grants Pass, Oregon, 1992.
Helnwein: How would you like the idea of building an actual Duckburg one day?
Barks: Who can tell what Duckburg really looks like?
Helnwein: If one studies your work carefully, there are a lot of indications. The money bin for example.
Barks:
Helnwein:
But I remember one in which the opening panel was a picture of the ducks up on top of a sky-scraper, looking down onto a big busy city with tall,mighty buildings, a wide river and steamboats. Barks: Helnwein: Barks: And then up on the hill the gigantic money bin...

27. The HTML BarksBase
Translate this page Die umfassende Internet-Datenbank über den berühmten Comiczeichner carl barks. Mit Biografie, kommentiertem Werkverzeichnis, alphabetischem und
http://www.barksbase.de/

28. Interview With Carl Barks
Interview with carl barks Disneyland Paris; July 7, 1994 carl barks This is our number nine. SD And you still have many left ?
http://www.pizarro.net/didier/_private/interviu/barks.html
Interview with Carl Barks
Disneyland Paris; July 7, 1994
by Sébastien Durand and Didier Ghez Sébastien Durand: This is the first time that you have traveled outside the United States. You have seen many countries. How many countries have you visited to date ?
Carl Barks: This is our number nine. SD: And you still have many left ? CB: Yes, I have more to visit: Holland and England. SD: I understand that you had no passport to leave the United States. When it came to passport, they did not accept that. That was not enough proof. And I can't remember how many things we had to do to finally convince them. They sent me a bunch of questions and I answered them. But anyway, they finally realized that I must have been born as an American citizen. They could not prove I wasn't, so they gave me a passport. SD: Was your childhood in that farm in Oregon your inspiration for Grandma Duck's farm ? Have you used your experience in the farm in your work, after that ? CB: Yes, in a way. Grandma Duck's farm had been established by the publishers in an other comic book. They had a comic book called Grandma Duck's farm friends. And they had established a pattern of an old granny lady that had a farm back in the middle west, which she grew corn in and things that were very different from the farm I had been used to. I could understand what it was all about because I knew what farmers were. And when it came time for me to write Grandma Duck's stories, I could do it very convincingly. SD: When you read that the Disney Studio was looking for artists, what kind of artwork did you send them as an example of your work ?

29. Index To Comic Art Collection: "Barks"
barks Bear Book 33 stories from the forties / by carl barks. The carl barks Library of Uncle Scrooge Comics OnePagers in Color Walt Disney s Uncle
http://www.lib.msu.edu/comics/rri/brri/barks.htm
Michigan State University Libraries
Special Collections Division
Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection
"Barks" Back to the B index screen
Back to the
...
Back up the list
Barks, Carl, 1901-2000
American comics artist
On down the list
This segment last edited May 26, 2001

30. American Culture In Carl Barks Comics
barks, carl Good Deeds in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 1, Gladstone/Another Rainbow Publishing, First published in 1943.
http://www.uta.fi/~kirsi.kapynen/Ankat/ankat.htm
American Culture in Carl Barks' Comics
Milla Mäkinen ja Kirsi Käpynen
Barks, Carl: "Good Deeds" in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 1 , Gladstone/Another Rainbow Publishing, First published in 1943. Barks, Carl: "Donald's Love Letters" in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 16 , Gladstone, First published in 1949. Barks, Carl: "Lifeguard Daze" in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 1 , Gladstone/Another Rainbow Publishing, First published in 1943. Barks, Carl: "Goldilocks Gambit" in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 16 , Gladstone, First published in 1949. Barks, Carl: "The Great Duckburg Frog Jumping Contest" in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 16 , Gladstone, First published in 1949. Barks, Carl: "Dowsing Ducks" in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 16 , Gladstone, First published in 1949. Barks, Carl: "The Rabbit's Foot" in Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 1 , Gladstone/Another Rainbow Publishing, First published in 1943. Barks, Carl: "The Limber W Guest Ranch" in Walt Disney’s Comics and Stories in Color No. 1

31. Carl Barks - His Life And His Work
carl barks is known to have tested the limits of Disney guidelines on a number of occasions. He drew beautiful, long legged girls, dangerous weapons and
http://moneybin.at.infoseek.co.jp/
[PR]¡“ú‚ÌÆ­°½‚Í
¢Infoseek ÓÊÞ²Ù£
Carl Barks
His Work and
His Life
The Gothic Duck -
Confronting Death in the Disney Comic
Death was and still is a taboo topic in Disney comics. Carl Barks is known to have tested the limits of Disney guidelines on a number of occasions. He drew beautiful, long legged girls, dangerous weapons and very violent fights. Some of these were initially censored and some were published at a much later date. The publication of a few gothic tales, however, was never touched by the censors. Of course, there is the magic tale In Ancient Persia (W OS #275) in which magic powder can resurrect the dead to life again. Barks skilfully conceived of an authentic Arabian environment in which the past came back to life for a short time. However, life is short for these people and they return to their everlasting peace. The topic was even more pronounced in a tale Barks wrote but never finished, called King Scrooge the First (the cover was drawn by Carl Barks) (US #71, 1967). The final product was finished by Tony Strobl, another Disney comic veteran. Nevertheless, the story still feels very much like a Barks story. While the story begins like many classic Duck adventures, at the end we learn that the goal of the villain was actually to find everlasting peace. While Uncle Scrooge can bathe in money, Khan Khan of the Mongolduks, who had thought he would enjoy eternal life, finally dies because he no longer can stand the loneliness of life without his friends, family and slave girls.

32. American National Biography Online: Barks, Carl
www.anb.org/articles/17/1701969.html - 3k - American National Biography Onlinebarks, carl (27 Mar. 1901-25 Aug. 2000), cartoonist, was born on a wheat ranch near Merrill, Oregon, the son of William barks, a homesteader,
http://www.anb.org/articles/17/17-01969.html

33. CARLBARKS.DE
Translate this page Eine informative Fanseite zum Leben des Comicmeisters carl barks, zu Büchern über ihn, zur Zensur seiner Geschichten und mit Bildern seiner Ölgemälde.
http://www.carlbarks.de/

34. Book List / Lars Wirzenius
barks, carl Aku Ankan parhaat VIII Puhuva koira ja muita Aku Ankan parhaita; barks, carl Aku Ankan parhaat IX Huiskahäntä ja muita Aku Ankan
http://liw.iki.fi/liw/books.html
liw.iki.fi/liw / Book list / Lars Wirzenius Home Braawi Programs
  • EoC ... Talks and presentations Other stuff liw@iki.fi
    Book list / Lars Wirzenius
    (Ex libris design by Jukka Rajala
    Fiction
    • Adams, Douglas: Dirk Gently's holistic detective agency Adams, Douglas: The hitch hiker's guide to the galaxy Adams, Douglas: The long dark tea-time of the soul Ahlrud, Sivar: Bilmysteriet Ahlrud, Sivar: Tefatsmysteriet Alanne, Outi: Neiti N:n tarina Allan, Emma: The dominatrix Alvin, Julius: Offensively gross jokes, XXXII Amory, Aaron: Sheer delight Anderson, Poul; Dickson, Gordon R.: Hoka! Hoka! Hoka! Anderson, Poul; Dickson, Gordon R.: Hokas pokas! Anonymous: The way of a man with a maid Arsan, Emmanuelle: Emmanuelle 1 ja 2 Arsan, Emmanuelle: Emmanuellen auringot Ashley, Mike: The mammoth book of seriously comic fantasy Ashton, Lisette: Slave sentence Asimov, Isaac: The caves of steel Asimov, Isaac: The complete robot Asimov, Isaac: Destination hj¤rnan (Fantastic voyage II: destination brain) Asimov, Isaac: D¶d robot (The robots of dawn) Asimov, Isaac:

35. CARL BARKS : Conversations - Donald Ault
Interviews with the Disney artist who created Scrooge McDuck and many wellloved comic books.
http://hans.presto.tripod.com/isbn/1578065011.html
Recommended Books In English
An ABC-Book

An Elegant Hand

Bizarro
Carl Barks Digital Prepress for Comic Books
Freehand Lettering

How to draw Manga

Johnston's Underground Type
... Search Libraries and Antiquarian Booksellers Contents Calligraphy
Steel Pens
nibs
Whats New?

Home
About Comics Comics Start Page
Comic Book Links
Lettering Fonts Lettering tutorial ... Online Comics Links Arts Books Calligraphy Comics ... Lettering comics Miscellaneous Pens Steel Pen Nibs www.nibs.tk Steel Nibs Brause Esterbrook ... Pen Links Nib Shop Store Front Special Offers 25 Vintage Nibs Copperplate Pens Keyword Title Author BARRIER, M Carl Barks and the Art of the Comic Book Michael Barrier Aug.1982

36. Carl Barks: Conversations
Disney artist carl barks (19012000) created one of Walt Disney s most famous characters, Scrooge McDuck. barks also produced more than 500 comic book
http://www.upress.state.ms.us/books/98
Search
By Author

By Series

By Subject

By Title
... Your Cart
Carl Barks: Conversations
Edited by Donald Ault
1-57806-500-3 Unjacketed cloth $50.00S 1-57806-501-1 Paper $20.00T Unjacketed cloth, $50.00 Paper, $20.00
Interviews with the Disney artist who created Scrooge McDuck and many well-loved comic books
Disney artist Carl Barks (1901-2000) created one of Walt Disney's most famous characters, Scrooge McDuck. Barks also produced more than 500 comic book stories. His work is ranked among the most widely circulated, best-loved, and most influential of all comic book art. Although the images he created are known virtually everywhere, Barks was an isolated storyteller, living in the desert of California and preferring to labor without public fanfare during most of his career. He created work of such exceptional quality that he was accorded the greatest autonomy of any Disney artist. He is the only comic book artist ever to receive a Disney Legends award. The influence of Barks's work on such filmmakers as George Lucas and Steven Spielberg and on such artists as Gottfried Helnwein has extended Barks's significance far beyond the boundaries of comics. After Barks's death at the age of ninety-nine, Roy Disney praised him for his "brilliant artistic vision."

37. Carl Barks - Don Markstein's Toonopedia
Most of carl barks s published work was unsigned. During most of his working years, he received absolutely no response from his readers, the vast majority
http://www.toonopedia.com/barks.htm
Home The Toon List Today in Toons The Forum ... Contact Us Cartoon Creators
  • Cartoon Producers Advertisements Today in Toons Sign Up Sign up to receive "Today in Toons" daily and other Toonopedia newsletters.
    Carl Barks (1901 to 2000)
    Job Description: Cartoonist Worked In: Comic books and animated cartoons Noted For: Donald Duck Uncle Scrooge Gyro Gearloose Junior Woodchucks , etc. Cartoons by Carl Barks Most of Carl Barks's published work was unsigned. During most of his working years, he received absolutely no response from his readers, the vast majority of whom knew nothing about him except there was something very special about his stories. When, in the early 1960s, he got his first fan letter, he thought it was a practical joke. But when he retired, the comic books he created remained in print, and eventually, his name started being printed in them. His fame spread throughout the world, as new generations grew up loving his work. He lived to see his name printed in dozens of different languages, in everything from scholarly treatises to children's picture books. How did Barks manage to touch so many lives, with no feedback from the public? As he put it, "I always tried to write a story that I wouldn't mind buying myself."

38. Untitled Document
He and his firm had for over 20 years enjoyed a healthy relationship with Disney and had successfully promoted carl barks and his work to adoring fans.
http://www.brucehamilton.com/anotherrainbow/Figurines/Pages/Destruction of figur
The Story behind The Destruction of
Carl Barks' Figurines Destruction Under Another Rainbow
The Main Event, Scoop, Friday, July 26, 2002 On Thursday, March 1, 2001, Bruce Hamilton did something he never thought he'd do, something that anyone who knows him finds hard to fathom, something that causes him to wince even now as he describes it.
He gathered together literally hundreds of delicate, finely detailed, high end Disney collectibles created by his company, Another Rainbow and - with witnesses present - he destroyed them.
What's more, The Walt Disney Company was in on it.
It didn't start out that way, of course. Hamilton and Another Rainbow had long been known as leading advocates of Disney characters in comic books, lithographs, and other items. Hamilton himself was one of the premiere Disney collectors, an early enthusiast, historian and collector of comics and other character collectibles. He and his firm had for over 20 years enjoyed a healthy relationship with Disney and had successfully promoted Carl Barks and his work to adoring fans.
Getting Started
"The company we produced the figurines through was a porcelain maker who specialized in world-class English bone china, in England, called Connoisseur of Malvern. They had expert sculptors and had a reputation primarily for doing flora and birds. In fact, in my living room I have number 2 in a limited edition of only 15 of a large macaw in foliage. It's just spectacular. I have it in a glass display case suspended over a staircase," Hamilton said.

39. 20070321 [OCLC]
New 100 1 barks, carl, ßd 19012000. n 79056585 Old 100 1 Bernays, Edward L., ßd 1891- New 100 1 Bernays, Edward L., ßd 1891-1995. no 94029626
http://www.oclc.org/rss/feeds/authorityrecords/20070321.htm
About OCLC News and Events Membership Contacts ... Site Map United States Closed dates in authority records archive Closed dates in authority records archive
Authority records for 20070321
Some entries require the ALA BT Courier font to display correctly. Please use Internet Explorer for best results when viewing this font. no 99040692
Old:
New:
no 91030290
Old:
New:
n 50027008
Old:
New:
n 85116654
Old:
New:
n 50021023
Old:
New:
n 50025352 Old: New: n 85085821 Old: New: n 81139216 Old: New: n 79056585 Old: New: no 94029626 Old: New: n 84122170 Old: New: n 85152805 Old: New: n 50018019 Old: New: n 79100285 Old: New: n 91062933 Old: New: n 79018604 Old: New: n 81028361 Old: New: n 79021577 Old: New: n 87102169 Old: New: n 89655271 Old: New: n 87945313 Old: New: no 94027350 Old: New: no 00038573 Old: New: n 81149366 Old: New: n 85199298 Old: New: n 95052685 Old: New: n 87847192 Old: New: n 96109601 Old: New: n 87860240 Old: New: n 93044085 Old: New: n 81108573 Old: New: n 82065974 Old: New: n 95016905 Old: New: no 93012524 Old: New: n 83003282 Old: New: n 86849743 Old: New: n 85240316 Old: New: n 85244166 Old: New: n 86012187 Old: New: no 99015878 Old: New: n 89626647 Old: New: n 85282529 Old: New: n 79029767 Old: New: n 50025409 Old: New: n 80124241 Old: New: n 87914238 Old: New: n 82113917 Old: New: n 81068915 Old: New: n 88202685 Old: New: n 85803878 Old: New: n 91083541 Old: New: n 87149725 Old: New: n 86075630 Old: New: n 50052085 Old: New: no 96064562 Old: New: n 88100647 Old: New: no 97007802 Old: New: n 79071186 Old: New: n 82017204 Old: New: n 80102220 Old: New: n 96067215 Old: New: n 82006258 Old: New: n 87893534

40. Carl-barks.net
s and pictures of lithographs, serigraphs and sculptures. Also includes information on the carl barks Fan Club.......
http://www.carl-barks.net/

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 2     21-40 of 72    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | Next 20

free hit counter