#Bud Sagendorf
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Popeye - Cover art by Bud Sagendorf (1952)
#bud sagendorf#popeye the sailor#comic art#dell comics#e.c. segar#comic covers#spinach farm#1950s#1952
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Popeye #22. October-December 1952
Cover: Bud Sagendorf
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Bud Sagendorf Popeye #55 Cover Original Art (Dell, 1960) Source
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Le Bloc
Bud Sagendorf
Nos héros préférés hors-série n° 14
2002
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Popeye #77 (1965) Bud Sagendorf, Stories by Sagendorf
#Popeye #77 (1965) Art & Stories by #Sagendorf "Weed Shortage, or, Pass the Spinach!" SAVE ON SHIPPING COST - NOW AVAILABLE FOR LOCAL PICK UP IN DELTONA, FLORIDA https://www.rarecomicbooks.fashionablewebs.com/Popeye.html #GoldKey #KeyComicBooks #RareComicBooks #VintageComicBooks

#Weed Shortage#or#Pass the Spinach!#Popeye#77 (1965) Bud Sagendorf#Stories by Sagendorf#Rare Comic Books#Key Comic Books#DC Comics#DCU#DC#Marvel Comics#MCU#Marvel#Marvel Universe#DC Universe#Dynamite Entertainment#Dark Horse Comic Books#Boom#IDW Publishing#Image Comics#Now Comics
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Finita!

Bud Sagendorf, Popeye da Alterlinus n. 5, maggio 1974, Milano, Milano Libri.
Immagine [1971]: J. Wellington Wimpy (Poldo Sbaffini)
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Bud Sagendorf Popeye the Sailor Illustration Original Art (c. 1960s)
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Hey Berdey... opinions on..Spinach?
Dunno, I've never had it. Heard it tastes bad, though.
Did someone say Spinach?!
You like them?
Of course! Don't you know that eating Spinach! will make you big and strong when you grow up?
Source?
Popeye!
Who's that?
Popeye the Sailor Man is a fictional cartoon character created by Elzie Crisler Segar.[39][40][41][42] The character first appeared on January 17, 1929, in the daily King Features comic strip Thimble Theatre. The strip was in its tenth year when Popeye made his debut, but the one-eyed sailor quickly became the lead character, and Thimble Theatre became one of King Features' most popular properties during the 1930s. Following Segar's death in 1938, Thimble Theatre was continued by several writers and artists, most notably Segar's assistant Bud Sagendorf. It was formally renamed Popeye. The strip continues to appear in first-run installments on Sundays, written and drawn by R.K. Milholland. The daily strips are reprints of old Sagendorf stories.[41]
In 1933, Max Fleischer adapted the Thimble Theatre characters into a series of Popeye the Sailor theatrical cartoon shorts for Paramount Pictures.[43] These cartoons proved to be
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Torna in Italia il Popeye di Bud Sagendorf
http://www.afews.info segnala: Dopo alcuni mesi (4, per l’esattezza) torna Gordiano Lupi scrittore, editore, traduttore e talent scout di Piombino, con la recensione dei primi albi dedicati al Popeye di Sagendorf (della COSMO Edizioni), quasi 200 pagine di una delle serie a fumetti più riuscite degli anni Cinquanta – Sessanta. Spazio alla recensione di Gordiano. Buona lettura – Mario Benenati,…
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The Sea Hag - art by Bud Sagendorf (1967)
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Bud Sagendorf Popeye, Olive Oyl, Bluto and Swee’Pea (1974) Source
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Popeye comic strip, April 10, 1976, original art by Bud Sagendorf
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Popeye #5, Feb-March 1949
Bud Sagendorf Art
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With the upcoming big fight from Death Battle (to which I’m hype, as Popeye vs Saitama was one of my number one wishlisted fights for them), I figured now would be a great time to repost this analysis of the series’ action I did a while back. The video focuses more on the best choreographed fights in the Popeye series than his biggest and most spectacular moments, so it won’t be full of impossible moments for all the feats analyzers to dissect, but it does show off some of the best movement, actionized animation, and flow that the Popeye series has created - I’ve always thought that an actiony adventure/comedy Popeye series based off of the comics would be a big hit nowadays, because classic Popeye (I’m a big fan of the Sagendorf era of comics myself, which read kind of like a Tintin parody) hits a lot of the beats that both fans of western animation and fans of anime nowadays both enjoy. If you’re an anime fan who likes the humor of something like - say - Kemono Michi, or a western animation fan who likes the general setup of something like Adventure Time or Amphibia (but without the darker elements), you might like the Popeye comics.
#popeye#popeye the sailor#greatest fights#death battle#popeye vs saitama#popeye comics#e. c. segar#bud sagendorf#fleischer studios#famous stu#olive oyl#sindbad the sailor#popeye the movie#robin williams#paneless window washer#organ grinder's swing#popeye doing rapid fire fisticuffs back in the 30's#Animated Minds for Animated Times
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