Thomas the Tank Engine (found original illustrated edition of book; 1946): Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
mNo edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{InfoboxFound | {{InfoboxFound | ||
|title=<center>Thomas the Tank Engine (original illustrated edition)</center> | |title=<center>Thomas the Tank Engine (original illustrated edition)</center> | ||
Line 8: | Line 7: | ||
|foundby=[http://ttte.wikia.com/wiki/User:291_Thomas_the_tank_engine Thomas the tank engine] | |foundby=[http://ttte.wikia.com/wiki/User:291_Thomas_the_tank_engine Thomas the tank engine] | ||
}} | }} | ||
''Thomas the Tank Engine'' is the 2nd book of The Railway Series published in 1946, and was the introduction of Thomas, arguably the series' most popular character. | ''Thomas the Tank Engine'' is the 2nd book of The Railway Series published in 1946, and was the introduction of Thomas, arguably the series' most popular character. | ||
When the book was first published in 1946, '''it had illustrations done by Reginald Payne instead of the now iconic drawings done by Clarence Reginald Dalby'''. Though he remained uncredited, Payne's illustrations were praised for being bolder and eye-catching than the illustrations of the previous book. Wilbert Awdry (the creator of Thomas the Tank Engine) was very pleased with the illustrations, with the exception of certain goofs such as various point work and track inaccuracies, with said goofs being fixed in C. Reginald Dalby's revised edition in 1950. Payne was due to be brought back to do the illustrations for ''James the Red Engine'', but he had suffered a nervous breakdown by that point, and therefore couldn't do it. The 1946 illustrations were lost for a long time, with the exception of one original illustration found by TEngine on TTTE Wikia. | |||
==Availability== | |||
On February 5th, 2017, ''TTTE'' Wikia user Thomas the tank engine updated the Wikia's page on Reginald to include all the original illustrations of the book. | On February 5th, 2017, ''TTTE'' Wikia user Thomas the tank engine updated the Wikia's page on Reginald to include all the original illustrations of the book. | ||
Line 48: | Line 50: | ||
==External Link== | ==External Link== | ||
*[http://ttte.wikia.com/wiki/Reginald_Payne/Gallery A ''Thomas the Tank Engine'' Wikia page containing all the original illustrations.] | *[http://ttte.wikia.com/wiki/Reginald_Payne/Gallery A ''Thomas the Tank Engine'' Wikia page containing all the original illustrations.] | ||
[[Category:Found media]] | [[Category:Found media]] |
Revision as of 03:59, 23 November 2022
Thomas the Tank Engine is the 2nd book of The Railway Series published in 1946, and was the introduction of Thomas, arguably the series' most popular character.
When the book was first published in 1946, it had illustrations done by Reginald Payne instead of the now iconic drawings done by Clarence Reginald Dalby. Though he remained uncredited, Payne's illustrations were praised for being bolder and eye-catching than the illustrations of the previous book. Wilbert Awdry (the creator of Thomas the Tank Engine) was very pleased with the illustrations, with the exception of certain goofs such as various point work and track inaccuracies, with said goofs being fixed in C. Reginald Dalby's revised edition in 1950. Payne was due to be brought back to do the illustrations for James the Red Engine, but he had suffered a nervous breakdown by that point, and therefore couldn't do it. The 1946 illustrations were lost for a long time, with the exception of one original illustration found by TEngine on TTTE Wikia.
Availability
On February 5th, 2017, TTTE Wikia user Thomas the tank engine updated the Wikia's page on Reginald to include all the original illustrations of the book.
Gallery
See Also
Thomas & Friends
- Thomas & Friends: All Engines Go (partially found test animation of reboot of British children TV series; 2019)
- Thomas & Friends: Day of the Diesels (lost original cut of direct-to-DVD film; existence unconfirmed; 2011)
- Thomas & Friends "Jack Jumps In" (found Alec Baldwin narration of British children's TV series episode; 2002)
- Thomas & Friends "Series 7" (partially found original music of American dub of British children's TV series; mid 2000s)
- Thomas & Friends "Series 12" (partially found Pierce Brosnan narrations of British children's animated series; 2008)
Thomas the Tank Engine
- Thomas the Tank Engine (lost pilot episode of unproduced 2D animated adaptation of "The Railway Series" books; 1976)
- Thomas the Tank Engine "Down the Mine" (partially found unaired pitch pilot version of children's TV series; 1983)
- Thomas the Tank Engine "The Missing Coach" (partially found footage from unfinished episode of children's TV series; 1986)
- Thomas the Tank Engine "Season 3" (found original Michael Angelis narrations of British children's TV series episodes; 1991)
- Thomas the Tank Engine "Season 4" (found pre-recorded version of British children's TV series episodes; 1994)
- Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends (partially lost deleted scenes of British children's TV series; 1984-2021)
Other
- Barry the Rescue Engine (lost production material of cancelled "The Railway Series" book; 1980s)
- Jack and the Sodor Construction Company (miscellaneous lost media of spinoff series; existence unconfirmed; 2002)
- The Sad Story of Henry (lost live BBC broadcast adaptation of "The Railway Series" books; 1953)
- Storytime with Thomas (partially found Fox Family series; 1999-2000)
- The Thomas & Friends Institute of Innovation (partially found informational short film; 2013-2014)
- Thomas and the Magic Railroad (found deleted scenes of children's fantasy adventure film; 2000)
- Thomas and the Magic Railroad (lost test footage of 3.5" character models for British children's TV series; 1995)
- Thomas and the U.K. Trip & Thomas Number 1 (found Japanese "Thomas the Tank Engine" crossover TV special and music video; 1993)
- Thomas the Tank Engine & Friends (found build of cancelled NES port of educational game; 1993)
- Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends (lost build of cancelled PlayStation educational game; 1999)
- The Three Railway Engines (found original edition of book; 1945)