Our Jim Flora “Plant You Now, Dig You Later” letterpress notecards are multi-purpose. One customer (whose name, forgive us, we’ve misplaced) had these 1950s jazz hepcats framed and sent us a snapshot. Others have used them as … notecards.
Continue Reading... frame job ►
Detail from Flora’s third children’s book, Charlie Yup and His Snip-Snap Boys (1959). Charlie, who wields a mean scissors (his “Snip-Snap Boys” are paper cut-outs), is in the upper left astride Beezer, his “helicopter horse.” For fans—like us—of Flora’s 1950s big-eyed figures, this was the end of the line, his last satisfying children’s book on an artistic level. He wrote and illustrated 14 more, which sold well and charmed generations of young readers. But our…
Continue Reading... Charlie Yup and pals ►
Flora woodcut print reproduced in Murderpie, a chapbook written by Robert Lowry, published by their struggling Little Man Press, Cincinnati, 1939. Many Little Man publications featured bizarre, meticulous cuts by Flora, but none of the original blocks are known to exist. This is one of the few extant signed LMP-era prints. From Lowry’s text: I WILL HAVE TO BAM THEM NOW, he said. He began to push them down with his two hands. He pushed…
Continue Reading... Murderpie ►
For years we’ve attempted to interest publishers in reprinting Jim Flora’s 17 popular children’s books. At the top of our wish-list were four titles: The Fabulous Firework Family (1955); The Day the Cow Sneezed (1957); Charlie Yup and His Snip-Snap Boys (1959); and Grampa’s Ghost Stories (1978). We consider these the top-tier Flora kiddie books on an artistic level—with The Day the Cow Sneezed the most outlandish of the quartet. We’ve had inquiries, offers, meetings,…
Continue Reading... The Day the Cow Sneezed ►
James Flora was born in Bellefontaine, Ohio, on this date in 1914. Legend has it he passed away on July 9, 1998. However, some refuse to acknowledge his departure. We see evidence of Flora’s presence every day, so perhaps they’re onto something.
Continue Reading... “the rumors were greatly exaggerated” ►
We’ve sold a bunch but they’re still in stock: 2010 Jim Flora calendars. The spunky hyperactive figures date from Flora’s mid-1950s RCA Victor LP period. Each calendar is letterpress printed one color at a time on card stock, and accessorized with a 12-month tearaway calendar. Buy one ($12.50) or a set of three at the Little Shop of Flora’s. These keepsake datekeepers were produced by Yee-Haw Industries, of Knoxville.
Continue Reading... Flora 2010 calendars ►
The full title of this undated (early- to mid-1940s) work is The Rape of the Stationmaster’s Daughter, a tempera on paper, titled in pencil on the reverse. It was reproduced in our second Flora anthology, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora, and its anatomically absurd actors were adapted by designer Laura Lindgren for the cover. In 2008 we issued a fine art print. A customer purchased a print last month and expressed admiration at…
Continue Reading... The Stationmaster’s Daughter ►
Unlettered page from Primer for Prophets booklet, 1954. This image will not be part of our screen print alphabet series.
Continue Reading... Floraville skyline ►
Detail, Okeh Records retail banner for then-new (1943) 78 rpm disc “Born To Lose” by Ted Daffan’s Texans. The grieving beau has an odd tic: crying out of one eye, thereby expressing semi-sorrow over the loss of his gal. The full banner was reproduced in our second anthology, The Curiously Sinister Art of Jim Flora.
Continue Reading... a curiously sinister lachrymosity ►
Great detail (extracted at the Print & Pattern blog) from Flora’s mid-1960s painting The Big Bank Robbery. We issued a limited edition fine art print of the work earlier this year. The backstory on the work is unknown. It may be a generic bank hold-up, or based on a specific historic incident. No documentation from the artist is known to exist.
Continue Reading... crimestoppers ►
