CARtoons Magazine

CARtoons magazine is an American publication that focuses on automotive humor and hot rod artwork. Originated by Carl Kohler and drag-racing artist Pete Millar, it was published by Robert E. Petersen Publication Company as a quarterly starting in 1959. Editors over the years included Dick Day, Jack Bonestell, and Dennis Ellefson. It should not be confused with the earlier Cartoons Magazine of the 1920s. The original CARtoons went defunct in 1991. In 2016, CARtoons resumed publication under new ownership of the trademark, and is currently published bimonthly.

CARtoons Magazine
CategoriesAutomobile magazine / Humor magazine
FrequencyQuarterly, bi-monthly, 8x/year
PublisherRobert E. Petersen
FounderCarl Kohler and Pete Millar
Year founded1959
Final issue
Number
(original) August 1991
185
CompanyRobert E. Petersen Publication Company
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Websitehttp://www.cartoonsmag.com

The original CARtoons featured articles, comic strips, step-by-step how-to drawing pages and more. The first issue included a comic strip, Rumpsville: The Saga of Rumpville, illustrated by Millar. In the 1960s until 1975 it carried the Unk and them Varmints strip (by Mike Arens and Willie Ito).

Through the years, some of the featured artists were Alex Toth, Tom Medley, Mike Arens, Jim Willoughby, Russ Manning, Willie Ito, Dale Hale, George Trosley (creator of Krass & Bernie), John Kovalic, Shawn Kerri (one of the few women who drew for the magazine), Duane Bibby, Steve Austin, Dave Deal, Joe Borer, Nelson Dewey, Bob Hardin, John Larter, Robert Williams, William Stout, Quentin Miller, Jim Grube, Errol McCarthy, and Dennis Ellefson.

Publications closely related to the original CARtoons were CYCLEtoons, SURFtoons and Hot Rod Cartoons.[1] (Peterson also published three issues of Choppertoons, of which very little has been written.)

Publication history

Originally published quarterly, in 1962 the magazine became bi-monthly. During some years in the 1970s and 1980s, the magazine published eight issues per year.

In 1975, the magazine underwent a complete overhaul with a new logo, new artists and new features. The late 1970s and early 1980s issues included iron-ons, a feature which ended in 1983, later replaced by a center poster which often was a larger print of the cover art.

The original run of CARtoons magazine folded with the August 1991 issue.

In 2015, Ontario artist Marc Methot successfully filed for the abandoned CARtoons trademark. He resumed publication of the magazine in January 2016 and it continues to be published bimonthly.[2]

gollark: Unfortunately 1.7 has no websockets.
gollark: Skynet is basically just a simple publish/subscribe websocket protocol with a CC library.
gollark: I plan to eventually create some sort of mesh network so we can run useless communication over slower but cheaper and less reliable networking.
gollark: It has a few firewolf servers running on ender modems.
gollark: e.g. Visit the `potat.os` website on switchcraft (assuming its ingame server is on) and those on advanced computers will actually get it installed.

References

  1. Makowski, Paul. "History of CARtoons" Archived 2009-04-24 at the Wayback Machine
  2. Williams, Greg. "On the Road: CARtoons back on track", Feb. 11 2017
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