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Thatâs the hardest thing is when a child hands you their drawing proudly and they ask you what you think about it. You donât want to stifle their creativity because they may not want to practice their skills further. My granddaughter has caught on now and usually tells me up front what it is so I can help her to improve it. If sheâs lucky sheâll get my Momâs or my sonâs talent so I encourage her everyday to keep it up!
i hate telling kids what i think of their drawings⌠every time i say the wrong thing.
âitâs a slug!â
âno, itâs not. itâs me.â
âoh. i knew that.â
now i just say âthatâs beautifulâ
Christopher Robin (Milne), son of A.A. Milne, had the same problem, Calvin. According to a then-famous interview, at the dinner table he prayed, âand let these peopleâ - the adults present - âunderstand about the dragon.â
Regarding the comic, am I the only one who gets his art? I got in the habit of just saying, âTell me about it!â the moment the kids gave a piece of art. I tended to say things like, âOh, I like this one better than the last oneâ or even, âI donât know, that one you did earlier was livelier.â Even had some framed.
The real problem for us with not squashing creativity was the âcreationsâ one of our sons made/makes which can be downright dangerous (if ingenious).
Puddlegum2
some literary advice about choosing your words âŚ
When I use a word, Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone,it means just what I choose it to mean â neither more nor less.â âŚ
Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carroll (also known as Charles Dodgson)
I have wonderful ideas in my head. When I put them on paper they look like Calvin drew them. Do I have a future in art? I can draw the clown and the pirate.
Too much being made of CnH lovers and their style of commenting.
Quoting Mother Teresa,âIf you judge people, you have no time to love them.â
It takes all kinds of people to make a world.
If I could find everyone else like I am then I would prefer to be a martian.
Cannot we appreciate the variety?
I am no erudite. I do not even know what does it mean.
Puddleglum: In case you didnât see from yesterdayâs comments⌠Thank you for the compliment on my name, and I like yours as well⌠I assume it is taken from CS Lewis? Classic.
Oldnmoldy: I have only been around for a few days, but I havenât seen anything in Puddleglumâs discussions that would be considered ostentatious. But maybe thatâs just me!
moronbis: I think that the discussion is a way to appreciate the variety. If we canât discuss and disagree on our differences then we might as well all be the same!
Sorry folks I like my little friend and his teddy bear ,for what I read and chuckle at.
You guys and gals must be missing that.
Calvins problem with his drawing reminds me of my attempts,still cant draw.
bacom65, âAbigail Van Burenâ is still around as far as I know. It was her twin sister âAnn Landersâ who died. The Dear Abby column has been taken over by âAbbyâsâ daughter. The twins were Esther Pauline and Pauline Esther Lederer. I donât remember which one was which, though I think Esther was âAnnâ and Pauline was âAbbyâ.
Ann Landers is dead. Her sister Abigail Van Buren is 92 and suffering from Alzheimers, but they are both still writing their daily advice columns. Now THATâS dedication!
Iâm really enjoying the literate and literary discussion
today! If this keeps up, Iâll have to haul my laptop outside
to the hammock under the locust tree and lay me down
in a proper environment where I can absorb all these deep, erudite thoughts.
Hang on to your drawings, Calvin. If you grow up to be famous they should be worth a fortune when youâre fifty or sixty years old, if inflation hasnât robbed them of their value in the meantimeâŚ.
When I was Calvinâs age, a teacher told me that I had musical talent, but that art was not my strength. I believed her and went on to enjoy two musical careers, one in performance and one in the business end of it.
After I retired, I decided to take an art class. Much to my amazement, I can draw and love doing it. A new world has opened to me. I have some regret that I didnât discover this ability sooner, but it is great fun to be a beginner and to explore my artistic potential.
Who knows, Calvin⌠maybe youâll find more success if you wait awhile.
JanCinVV said: bacom65, âAbigail Van Burenâ is still around as far as I know. It was her twin sister âAnn Landersâ who died. The Dear Abby column has been taken over by âAbbyâsâ daughter. The twins were Esther Pauline and Pauline Esther Lederer. I donât remember which one was which, though I think Esther was âAnnâ and Pauline was âAbbyâ.
âAnn Landersâ was Esther âEppieâ Pauline Friedman Lederer. She died in June, 2002. Her column was then taken over by her (2) editors and renamed âAnnieâs Mailbox.â
âAbigail Van Burenâ or âDear Abbyâ was Eppieâs twin sister, Pauline âPopoâ Esther Friedman Phillips. She retired in 1995 with the onset of Alzheimerâs disease (and is still alive as far as I know) . Thatâs when her daughter, Jeanne Phillips, took over her motherâs column and owns the legal rights to the âDear Abbyâ pen name.
Calvin, if the weird and confusing pictures Picasso painted can be worth millions of $$$, then so can yours someday! Remind your mother of this so that sheâll hold onto them for you in preparation of that day!!!!!
Wiseguy411,
Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. The rest of the year was not so good. Actually, he became just âa shell of his former selfâ. Humpty lost face, not to mention the rest of his body. Ultimately, the yolk was on him.
âTheyâ couldnât put Humpty together again. I canât put his words together either, to make any sense. If a word is just what he chooses it to mean, then it doesnât matter what word he uses, but nobody will know what he chooses it to mean unless there is exposition.
Since you didnât say what you choose your comments to mean, I will assume that you are only being facetious.
Picassoâs childhood drawings (by age 5, anyway) were brilliantly observant and astonishingly talented. At 16 he was winning adult art awards with painstaking, inspired classical-themed works in oil. âScience and Charityâ is not only a timeless work of great art, but itâs psychologically and even spiritually deep in the nuances of the facial expressions.
Picasso said it took him a lifetime to unlearn how to draw properly. By age 30 he had done the most revolutionary work of all time (Demoiselles dâAvignon), but he kept inventing new stuff - even if it was as simple as mounting the perfect handlebar on the perfect bicycle seat at the perfect angle to make a very expressive, totally convincing goat head.
Anybody who over-uses the word âgeniusâ should spend at least one minute looking (really looking!) at Picasso. Any Picasso.
margueritem over 14 years ago
One must suffer for oneâs artâŚ
GROG Premium Member over 14 years ago
Itâs true
Good Morning, Marg, Mike & â Lonewolfâ
Vista Bill Raley and Comet⢠over 14 years ago
Keep trying, CalvinâŚ
Yukoner over 14 years ago
Hmm, has he invented Mr. Potatohead?
rentier over 14 years ago
Thatâs very true! And give us YOUR mercy!
COWBOY7 over 14 years ago
Stay with it, Calvin. It can only go up from here!
GâMorning Mike, Grog & Marg!
Dino-1 over 14 years ago
Thatâs the hardest thing is when a child hands you their drawing proudly and they ask you what you think about it. You donât want to stifle their creativity because they may not want to practice their skills further. My granddaughter has caught on now and usually tells me up front what it is so I can help her to improve it. If sheâs lucky sheâll get my Momâs or my sonâs talent so I encourage her everyday to keep it up!
brekkyjuice over 14 years ago
i hate telling kids what i think of their drawings⌠every time i say the wrong thing. âitâs a slug!â âno, itâs not. itâs me.â âoh. i knew that.â now i just say âthatâs beautifulâ
moronbis over 14 years ago
Just the fact that no one can understand you doesnât mean that you are an artist.
paha_siga over 14 years ago
My older child has got into habit of writing in big letter on picture, what it is supposed to be. Makes being mom much easier.
Rakkav over 14 years ago
Christopher Robin (Milne), son of A.A. Milne, had the same problem, Calvin. According to a then-famous interview, at the dinner table he prayed, âand let these peopleâ - the adults present - âunderstand about the dragon.â
Amen.
violet_music over 14 years ago
everybody also say that their parents suck
GROG Premium Member over 14 years ago
Oh?
Rakkav over 14 years ago
There is just so much wrong with that statement, isnât there, Grog?
Rakkav over 14 years ago
cdward, if youâre out there, see my reply to you yesterday about the use of vowels in Hebrew.
vibjyor over 14 years ago
How true, âNo one understandsâ - including the artist himself !
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
Calvin, maybe you need more passion. As Dear Abby said this morning, âArt without passion is mechanical drawing.â
cdward over 14 years ago
Regarding the comic, am I the only one who gets his art? I got in the habit of just saying, âTell me about it!â the moment the kids gave a piece of art. I tended to say things like, âOh, I like this one better than the last oneâ or even, âI donât know, that one you did earlier was livelier.â Even had some framed.
The real problem for us with not squashing creativity was the âcreationsâ one of our sons made/makes which can be downright dangerous (if ingenious).
Tineli over 14 years ago
so true!
olmail over 14 years ago
well Calvin, you do seem to have done well at âdrawingâ out the erudite.
rentier over 14 years ago
Itâs great art, when no one understands it!
Wiseguy411 over 14 years ago
Puddlegum2 some literary advice about choosing your words âŚ
When I use a word, Humpty Dumpty said, in rather a scornful tone,it means just what I choose it to mean â neither more nor less.â ⌠Through the Looking Glass - Lewis Carroll (also known as Charles Dodgson)
lewisbower over 14 years ago
I have wonderful ideas in my head. When I put them on paper they look like Calvin drew them. Do I have a future in art? I can draw the clown and the pirate.
bacom65 over 14 years ago
Is Dear Abby still around?? I thought she died.
oldnmoldy over 14 years ago
Puddlegum: I canât decide if I think you are erudite or merely pedantic.
oletimer over 14 years ago
ho hum
moronbis over 14 years ago
Too much being made of CnH lovers and their style of commenting. Quoting Mother Teresa,âIf you judge people, you have no time to love them.â It takes all kinds of people to make a world. If I could find everyone else like I am then I would prefer to be a martian. Cannot we appreciate the variety?
I am no erudite. I do not even know what does it mean.
LeslieAnne over 14 years ago
Puddleglum: In case you didnât see from yesterdayâs comments⌠Thank you for the compliment on my name, and I like yours as well⌠I assume it is taken from CS Lewis? Classic.
Oldnmoldy: I have only been around for a few days, but I havenât seen anything in Puddleglumâs discussions that would be considered ostentatious. But maybe thatâs just me!
moronbis: I think that the discussion is a way to appreciate the variety. If we canât discuss and disagree on our differences then we might as well all be the same!
bmonk over 14 years ago
No one understands Calvinâs workâeven he doesnât!
mike.firesmith over 14 years ago
**Good morning Marg! Good morning Fran and Kizzzy! Good Morning LâWolf! Good Morning Grog!**
I wonder if that was one of Wattersonâs early drawings?
Sylvannis over 14 years ago
lolâŚ
ratlum over 14 years ago
Sorry folks I like my little friend and his teddy bear ,for what I read and chuckle at. You guys and gals must be missing that. Calvins problem with his drawing reminds me of my attempts,still cant draw.
Rakkav over 14 years ago
No, we donât miss that by and large, ratlum. We just go on to other things from there. :)
Too much Puddleglum2 in one day, however, does tend to loosen everyone elseâs philosophical tongues. :))
JanLC over 14 years ago
bacom65, âAbigail Van Burenâ is still around as far as I know. It was her twin sister âAnn Landersâ who died. The Dear Abby column has been taken over by âAbbyâsâ daughter. The twins were Esther Pauline and Pauline Esther Lederer. I donât remember which one was which, though I think Esther was âAnnâ and Pauline was âAbbyâ.
mblase75 over 14 years ago
Easiest dayâs work Bill Watterson ever put in.
billdi Premium Member over 14 years ago
serial demonstrations of oneâs erudition and knowledge of grammar and usage on a comics comment board are kind of sad, kind of lame.
Frankr over 14 years ago
Ann Landers is dead. Her sister Abigail Van Buren is 92 and suffering from Alzheimers, but they are both still writing their daily advice columns. Now THATâS dedication!
agpeter over 14 years ago
Iâm really enjoying the literate and literary discussion today! If this keeps up, Iâll have to haul my laptop outside to the hammock under the locust tree and lay me down in a proper environment where I can absorb all these deep, erudite thoughts.
ladywolf17 over 14 years ago
I agree that statement is definitely true.
ellisaana Premium Member over 14 years ago
Well, of courseâŚits a picture of Calvin in a Mr Potato Head costume.
To Johanan - there is very little âregularâ about English. It is such a mongrel language. Everything sticks to it.
lazygrazer over 14 years ago
Calvin draws every bit as good as Bill Watterson doesâŚ.and vice versa come to think of it.
kab2rb over 14 years ago
bacom65 for dear Abby you can google it column still continues the daughter has taken over.
khpage over 14 years ago
Hang on to your drawings, Calvin. If you grow up to be famous they should be worth a fortune when youâre fifty or sixty years old, if inflation hasnât robbed them of their value in the meantimeâŚ.
whims over 14 years ago
Isnât snow his preferred medium, anyway?
harrietbe over 14 years ago
When I was Calvinâs age, a teacher told me that I had musical talent, but that art was not my strength. I believed her and went on to enjoy two musical careers, one in performance and one in the business end of it.
After I retired, I decided to take an art class. Much to my amazement, I can draw and love doing it. A new world has opened to me. I have some regret that I didnât discover this ability sooner, but it is great fun to be a beginner and to explore my artistic potential.
Who knows, Calvin⌠maybe youâll find more success if you wait awhile.
Gretchen's Mom over 14 years ago
JanCinVV said: bacom65, âAbigail Van Burenâ is still around as far as I know. It was her twin sister âAnn Landersâ who died. The Dear Abby column has been taken over by âAbbyâsâ daughter. The twins were Esther Pauline and Pauline Esther Lederer. I donât remember which one was which, though I think Esther was âAnnâ and Pauline was âAbbyâ.
âAnn Landersâ was Esther âEppieâ Pauline Friedman Lederer. She died in June, 2002. Her column was then taken over by her (2) editors and renamed âAnnieâs Mailbox.â
âAbigail Van Burenâ or âDear Abbyâ was Eppieâs twin sister, Pauline âPopoâ Esther Friedman Phillips. She retired in 1995 with the onset of Alzheimerâs disease (and is still alive as far as I know) . Thatâs when her daughter, Jeanne Phillips, took over her motherâs column and owns the legal rights to the âDear Abbyâ pen name.
Gretchen's Mom over 14 years ago
Calvin, if the weird and confusing pictures Picasso painted can be worth millions of $$$, then so can yours someday! Remind your mother of this so that sheâll hold onto them for you in preparation of that day!!!!!
gofinsc over 14 years ago
A dead person is still writing an advice column?
Itâs impressionist, Calvin. No matter what it is, itâs how it appears to you, and thatâs perfect.
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
A Vonnegut by any other name would smell as suspicious.
Puddleglum2 over 14 years ago
Wiseguy411, Humpty Dumpty had a great fall. The rest of the year was not so good. Actually, he became just âa shell of his former selfâ. Humpty lost face, not to mention the rest of his body. Ultimately, the yolk was on him. âTheyâ couldnât put Humpty together again. I canât put his words together either, to make any sense. If a word is just what he chooses it to mean, then it doesnât matter what word he uses, but nobody will know what he chooses it to mean unless there is exposition. Since you didnât say what you choose your comments to mean, I will assume that you are only being facetious.
TN-REDD over 14 years ago
Kinda looks like Spaceman Spud
avonsalis over 14 years ago
Picassoâs childhood drawings (by age 5, anyway) were brilliantly observant and astonishingly talented. At 16 he was winning adult art awards with painstaking, inspired classical-themed works in oil. âScience and Charityâ is not only a timeless work of great art, but itâs psychologically and even spiritually deep in the nuances of the facial expressions.
Picasso said it took him a lifetime to unlearn how to draw properly. By age 30 he had done the most revolutionary work of all time (Demoiselles dâAvignon), but he kept inventing new stuff - even if it was as simple as mounting the perfect handlebar on the perfect bicycle seat at the perfect angle to make a very expressive, totally convincing goat head.
Anybody who over-uses the word âgeniusâ should spend at least one minute looking (really looking!) at Picasso. Any Picasso.
holeycow over 14 years ago
put put put putâŚ
Emoji Of Lightning over 4 years ago
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