Last time I looked at GM, about 30 years ago, Minnie Peters always kept her hands primly inside her muff, as if to emphasise her family’s gentility.Look at an old strip and you’ll see.
I was having a joke with you.Minnie hasn’t worn her muff in many years as girls don’t tend to walk around with them any more. They’re very much something used yesteryear, in mainly cold seasons.Glad you’re still reading Meggs after all these years!Thanks for reading.
G’day Jason, JFri, Us Fellers, ottod and Meggsiefan!
David & Jason thanks for the memory! When I was a little girl back in the early 60’s, I had one of those muffs. I loved it! I felt ever so important and so “grown up” when I wore it, usually for church on winter Sundays!
Dry, I’m amazed that any little girl in Australia ever wore a muff. I thought the Peters family were just being pretentious.There was a real class-consciousness in the comic in those days.
By the way: I write literacy exercises, and I’ve just started work on one on Australia’s national comic and finding it difficult to get much material. I’ll send the finished product to Jason.
What a tragedy was Tiger Kelly – trapped in an unescapable limbo between adulthood and adolescence.
PS Sorry to be hogging his noticeboard, but I recently learned that Jason’s precessor James Kemsley was also famous for being “Skeeter the Paperboy” on TV in the late 70’s.
i_am_the_jam over 13 years ago
You should hear what they say in American football…
davidblack over 13 years ago
What happened to Minnie’s muff?
Ginger Meggs over 13 years ago
I beg your pardon?
davidblack over 13 years ago
Last time I looked at GM, about 30 years ago, Minnie Peters always kept her hands primly inside her muff, as if to emphasise her family’s gentility.Look at an old strip and you’ll see.
davidblack over 13 years ago
Muff: A piece of fur or cloth, usually with open ends, used for keeping the hands warm.
Ginger Meggs over 13 years ago
Hi David,
I was having a joke with you.Minnie hasn’t worn her muff in many years as girls don’t tend to walk around with them any more. They’re very much something used yesteryear, in mainly cold seasons.Glad you’re still reading Meggs after all these years!Thanks for reading.
Jason
COWBOY7 over 13 years ago
Boys will be boys!
Good Morning, Meggsie Fans!
COWBOY7 over 13 years ago
RE graffiti: That’s a hot one, Jason……………………………………
ottod Premium Member over 13 years ago
Uoommnh?
Dry and Dusty Premium Member over 13 years ago
G’day Jason, JFri, Us Fellers, ottod and Meggsiefan!
David & Jason thanks for the memory! When I was a little girl back in the early 60’s, I had one of those muffs. I loved it! I felt ever so important and so “grown up” when I wore it, usually for church on winter Sundays!
davidblack over 13 years ago
Dry, I’m amazed that any little girl in Australia ever wore a muff. I thought the Peters family were just being pretentious.There was a real class-consciousness in the comic in those days.
By the way: I write literacy exercises, and I’ve just started work on one on Australia’s national comic and finding it difficult to get much material. I’ll send the finished product to Jason.
What a tragedy was Tiger Kelly – trapped in an unescapable limbo between adulthood and adolescence.
davidblack over 13 years ago
PS Sorry to be hogging his noticeboard, but I recently learned that Jason’s precessor James Kemsley was also famous for being “Skeeter the Paperboy” on TV in the late 70’s.