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Charles Folkard

  Charles Folkard was born in Lewisham, South London, on 6 April 1878, the son of a printer. Educated locally at Colfe's Grammar School, he began an apprenticeship with a firm of designers, but left to become a conjuror. It was in designing programs for his shows that he discovered his talent for drawing. He then studied at various art schools – including Goldsmiths' College and those at St John's Wood, Blackheath and Sidcup – while beginning to establish a career as an illustrator. Initially contributing humorous drawings to such periodicals as Little Folks and The Tatler, he made his name, in 1910, with illustrations to an edition of Johann Wyss's The Swiss Family Robinson. A year later, he illustrated The Children's Shakespeare and Grimm's Fairy Tales, so initiating a relationship with the publisher, A & C Black, which would last for twenty-seven years. In 1915, Folkard joined the Daily Mail as a staff artist and, in that position, invented the newspape...

Gustaf Tenggred

  Gustaf Adolf Tenggren (November 3, 1896 – April 9, 1970) was a Swedish-American illustrator. He is known for his Arthur Rackham-influenced fairy-tale style and use of silhouetted figures with caricatured faces. Tenggren was a chief illustrator for The Walt Disney Company in the late 1930s, in what has been called the Golden Age of American animation, when animated feature films such as Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, Fantasia, Bambi and Pinocchio were produced.