📚 Vintage western coloring book: The Lone Ranger Coloring Book, Authorized Edition | ©️The Lone Ranger, Inc. LOTS of visible wear and tear! This was a well-loved coloring book. About 30 to 35 pages have been colored. There's still plenty left to color! The edges of the book are a bit battered. The binding is ripped quite a bit and the back page/cover is missing. This is a very hard to find coloring book. There's one loose page but again LOTS of unused pages. If you have any questions or would like more photos, please message me. Thank you for supporting a small business! It's shoppers like you that keep the small business world going!
Coloring Pages Power Rangers - a set of outline pictures based on the popular TV series. You just need to download Power Rangers coloring pages for free from the website, print illustrations for children.
Cover for The Lone Ranger, Issue #66, December 1953
Looking for unique black history facts? Check out my facts on Bass Reeves, an African American U.S. Deputy Marshal known as the Lone Ranger.
Paper Type: Value Poster Paper (Matte) Your walls are a reflection of your personality, so let them speak with your favorite quotes, art, or designs printed on our custom Giclee posters! Choose from up to 5 unique, high quality paper types to meet your creative or business needs. All are great options that feature a smooth surface with vibrant full color printing. Using pigment-based inks (rather than dye-based inks), your photos and artwork will be printed at the highest resolution, preserving all their original detail and their full-color spectrum. Browse through standard or custom size posters and framing options to create art that’s a perfect representation of you. Gallery quality Giclee prints Ideal for vibrant artwork and photo reproduction Matte finish with an acid-free smooth surface Pigment-based inks for full-color spectrum high-resolution printing 45 lb., 7.5 point thick poster paper Available in custom sizing up to 60” Frame available on all standard sizes Frames include Non-Glare Acrylic Glazing
Welcome to my first western theme week! I certainly do love me some westerns; whether it's presented in movies, comics, pulp novels, or just playing some cowboys and Indians as a kid. Hey, even some of that country & western music ain't all that bad! So join me each day this week as we take a fond look at how the western genre has contributed to pop culture ..... starting off with a hearty "Hi-Yo-Silver!" The Lone Ranger is a masked, Texas Ranger in the American Old West, who gallops about righting injustices, usually with the aid of a clever and laconic Native American sidekick called Tonto, and his horse Silver. He would famously say "Hi-yo Silver, away!" to get the horse to gallop. On the original radio and TV-series, the opening announcement was: "A fiery horse with the speed of light, a cloud of dust, and a hearty, "Hi-yo-Silver!" The Lone Ranger" In later episodes the opening narration ended with the catch phrase "Return with us now to those thrilling days of yesteryear.... The Lone Ranger Rides Again!" Episodes usually ended with one of the characters lamenting the fact that they never found out the hero's name ("Who was that masked man?"), only to be told, "Why, he's the Lone Ranger!" as he and Tonto ride away. The famed theme music was the "cavalry charge" finale of Gioacchino Rossini's William Tell Overture, now inseparably associated with the series, which also featured many other classical selections as incidental music including Wagner, Mendelssohn, Liszt, and Tchaikovsky. The Lone Ranger first premiered in 1933 on the Mutual Broadcasting Network and continued until 1954, but a more well known and influential adaptation of the Lone Ranger was the (1949-1957) television series starring Clayton Moore (pictured; above) and Jay Silverheels as Tonto. A comic book adaptation also ran from 1948 until 1975; through two different publishers. Additional comics versions have appeared sporadically since then. Trivia: Another popular cult hero, The Green Hornet, spun out of the Ranger's mythos as the modern Hornet (Britt Reid) is the descendant of Lone Ranger, Dan Reid.
Vintage Comic - Lone Ranger #062 Pencils: Don Spaulding (Painting) Inks: Don Spaulding (Painting) Colors: Don Spaulding (Painting) Dell (Aug1953)