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Illustrator Draftsman 1 & C - Volume 3 Executionable Practices
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Semi-realistic cartoons

Cartoons Introduction There is a long history of the use of cartoons in the military.    During  World War II, popular cartoon characters adorned aircraft fuselages as nose art and squadrons  patches  identified  squadrons  and  their  missions.  More  recently, Half Hitch, a cartoon Sailor, and Grampa Pettibone, an old chief safety supervisor,  appeared  in  Navy  magazines.  Cartoons  are  commonly  found  on safety posters and in some training manuals such as this one and the manual on The Metric System. Advantages  of Cartoons are natural attention getters and hold viewer’s attention long enough cartoons to  deliver  short  messages.  They  liven  up  dreary  subjects.  Cartoons emphasize security and safety, ‘add interest to training and briefing material, and promote recruiting and retention. Use a cartoon to subdue real tragedies that would normally frighten or repulse. Figure 4-1 shows a cartoon safety poster depicting a real hazard and a potential tragedy. Figure 4-1.—A safety poster depicting a real hazard and a potential tragedy. Continued  on  next  page 4-3

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