Discover the most popular and inspiring quotes and sayings on the topic of Cartoonish. Share them with your friends on social media platforms like Facebook, Twitter, or your personal blogs, and let the world be inspired by their powerful messages. Here are the Top 100 Cartoonish Quotes And Sayings by 97 Authors including Chris Ware,Craig Mccracken,Ne-Yo,Simon Callow,Jack Abramoff for you to enjoy and share.
Cartoons are not real drawings, because they are drawings intended to be read.
Well, for one thing, the executives in charge at Cartoon Network are cartoon fans. I mean, these are people who grew up loving animation and loving cartoons, and the only difference between them and me is they don't know how to draw.
I watch cartoons the way most adults watch reality-TV shows.
He always describes his characters' voices and their physique so brilliantly. As people have said, they are cartoons, caricatures. They're grotesques really.
All I want is for people not to see me as this cartoon monster.
When you are drawing characters to serve a plot purpose, you tend to get flat, stereotyped, unliving characters.
I like characters that are fragile and a little bit on the edge .
I watch a lot of cartoons. I watch a lot of "SpongeBob SquarePants" and "Phineas and Ferb."
He's just ... " I tried, wanting to say "sweet" or "caring" or "funny" - because they're all totally true. But instead, I said, "He's just a normal boy."
"Hmph," Macey scoffed. "I know lots of normal boys."
I looked at her. "I don't.
Adorkable. It's in its own category.
I think cartooning gets at, and re-creates on the page, some sixth sense ... in a way no other medium can.
Annoyingly attractive
I have this certain vision of the way I want my comics to look; this sort of photographic realism, but with a certain abstraction that comics can give. It's kind of a fine line.
I'm a great admirer of cartoons, because I can't do cartoons.
Cartoons have always been an enjoyment to me ... a relaxation ... I get my ideas from everyday events.
Cartooning is for people who can't quite draw and can't quite write. You combine the two half-talents and come up with a career.
I am like a cartoon strip; I am like Donald Duck; everybody knows me in Italy.
I didn't watch cartoons, I was too busy playing football.
When you look at a photo or realistic drawing of a face, you see it as the face of another . But when you enter the world of the cartoon , you see yourself.
I've got an adjective that just fits you.
A miracle to confound natural law, a baffling reversal of the inevitable consequences ... a miracle ... An act of high imagination
daring and lurid and impossible. Yes, a cartoon of the mind.
Arty. To me the word's got as much venom associated with it as 'wacky'.
Some of those cartoons look nothing like me.
Sometimes we just need a little break from this thing we call 'life', and step into the cartoon life for a moment
It's called Seflish, which is fitting
Mainstream animated movies are dumbed-down and sanitised: they make the world in their own image rather than exploring the limitless possibilities that are out there.
It had a sort of a head on it, like a mushroom, and its color was reddish purple. It looked blunt and stupid, compared, say, to fingers and toes with their intelligent expressiveness, or even to an elbow or a knee.
A lot of people feel that there is less artistry involved in cartoon making unless they have painstaking control of each frame.
Wow, you got a car!" she said, surveying the toy box. "it's so cute!"
Cute. He was starting to hate that word.
"I think the word you're looking for is manly," he said.
There was a time when watching a cartoon was a nurturing experience. You would watch a Warner Bros. cartoon, and at the end of it you could probably win 'Jeopardy.'
Artists forget than the first purpose of a comic character is to convey emotion. Everything else, like realism, or other kinds of virtuosity, is an optional extra. If you sacrifice expression for the sake of other concerns, you're putting the cart before the horse.
I was thinking of the word Surrealistic ... I don't think it should be used exclusively with my photographs. The meaning is close but I think my tendencies are more toward the whimsical or absurd. Surrealism is more connected with morbidity. From that I am very far away.
A cartoon character isn't a specific person. It isn't Tom Cruise or George Clooney playing the part, it's a character that could be you. It's easier for you to get drawn into it in a special way.
So far as I am concerned, I am not at all aware that there indeed exists a serious side as well to my cartoons drawn in an inspired mood of mischievous abandon.
Astonishingly slimy and dangerous
I don't think about myself having any form or style. Although it does tend to be rather realistic; not too stylised at all, it's not as exaggerated as comic art normally is. I try to go for a more realistic looking approach to my art.
I hate to fall back on weird to describe them, but goofy is too weak, and strange sounds too sensible.
pink is too juvenile;
Try to look like Peabody."
"Sorry?"
"Serious, official, yet approachable."
"You forgot adorable."
"Peabody is not adorable."
"She is from my perspective. Besides, I was talking about me.
little too undistinguished, a little
Fluid and energetic and wild very, very smart and very, very funny.
My style is ambiguous and lucid.
Young. Goofy. Infinite.
Animation isn't the illusion of life; it is life
Short blonde hair, big rectangular forehead, like Frankenstein made a second monster, and that monster loved death metal and Twinkies.
A furry, for the uninitiated, is a person who identifies very deeply with, and dresses up as, an anthropomorphized animal. There have been quite a few evening news segments devoted to them, with lots of ominous music playing over shots of Care Bears walking down the street holding hands. YouTube it.
Mr. Green Sweater looks normal, but his wingman looks hard-core bad boy," said Vee. "Emits a certain don't-mess-with-me signal. Tell me he doesn't look like Dracula's spawn. Tell me I'm imagining things.
I've always been very animated.
Once you start writing a character visually, you're in trouble.
You're cute when you do that," he called to me.
"When I do what?"
"Turn in a circle like that. It's kind of penguin-y."
"Great," I called back. "Just what every girl dreams of being told by their inhumanly attractive, immortal vampire protector: they look kind of 'penguin-y.
All kids draw some kind of cartoon characters. They just grow out of them, and I didn't
When you think about it, 'Avatar' is almost completely an animated movie.
In a way, the political cartoon drawings are things that are small and have humor and a childhood aesthetic and are often stronger to spread an opinion.
I'd rather go with something eccentric
but beautifully eccentric.
Between the suit and the pinkish hair, he looks like an emo gangster.
The design is a really flat primary color with all sorts of abstract geometric shapes, just implying something. And then you'd have your characters running from something with guns. It was very expressionistic.
Sometimes I think that there's a fine line between impressionistic and messy.
I'm a fan of animation and so, the more stuff that doesn't look like the other stuff that's out there, I'm in favor.
The face is like a penis.
Cartooning is preaching. And I think we have a right to do some preaching. I hate shallow humor. I hate shallow religious humor, I hate shallow sports humor, I hate shallowness of any kind.
I liked the girly cartoons. I was very much a girly-girl.
As a cartoonist, I'm a caricaturist. First you find out what somebody really looks like, and then you find out what they 'really' look like.
Weird, but sometimes I feel more like my cartoon character than I do Lizzie because she's a little more edgy and snappy.
The only cartoon I ever liked was 'Fantasia.'
Cartoons for girls don't have to be a puddle of smooshy, cutesy-wootsy, goody-two-shoeness. Girls like stories with real conflict; girls are smart enough to understand complex plots; girls aren't as easily frightened as everyone seems to think.
He has no interest in comics. He doesn't understand the difference between serious graphic novels and Saturday-morning cartoons with wide-eyed tweetybirds and floppy-limbed cats.
I like the idea of bringing cartoon characters to life ... and although the Americans have already attempted this, their culture is not sufficiently humane to make it work.
[Comics] were viewed as the literary equivalent of bubblegum cards, meant to be poked into the spokes of a young mind where they would produce a satisfying but entirely bogus rumble of pleasure.
Boyishness - by which I mean animal life in its fullest measure, good nature and honest impulses, hatred of injustice and meanness, and thoughtlessness enough to sink a three-decker.
Yet this rumble is cartoon thunder.
I describe my personal style as 'mythic space horse with chocolate box tendencies.'
Most cartoons are those colors. They have been for 35 years.
good looking in an adorkable kind of way.
My cartoons appear in newspapers, which are full of words, but there's something about having it in this little box that confounds people's expectations.
I've never met a cartoonist who isn't quirky or weird in some ways.
'Dragonball' is the coolest television cartoon in the last 50,000 years.
She has a human face and as far as the groin she is a girl with lovely breasts, but below she is a monstrous sea creature, her womb 430 full of wolves,
If you need three adjectives to describe something, then you've probably chosen the wrong something.
Each cartoon needs the right amount of wrong.
Unsettling, like seeing Stalin on a skateboard.
I'm not sure how to describe my style. A lot of my work is dark and looks a bit sad, which is strange because I'm such a smiley, over-the-top positive guy who wears gold shoes most days.
A tawdry, cartoonlike version of female sexuality has become so ubiquitous, it no longer seems particular. What we once regarded as a *kind* of sexual expression we now regard *as* sexuality.
I didn't want to start acting like a cartoon.
She looks like a fairy tale, but yet feels so natural (natural, natural, natural)
This one's a beast, but way to wonderful to be compared to an animal
I strenuously object to the very word "grotesque" which has become hackneyed to the point of nausea ... I would prefer my music to be described as "Scherzo-ish" in quality, or else by three words describing the various degrees of the Scherzo - whimsicality, laughter, mockery.
I'm a cartoonist, it's what I am at heart, so cartoons take reality and deform it and make it grotesque, you make it funny, but you alter it. If it works, it's based on reality. That's what I try to do.
abysmally beshitted.
Hopeless. Freak. Elephant. Pitiful
In his work shirt and underpants, he looked powerful but also cartoonish, like a bear dressed up for a job interview.
Traditionally, the only way I come up with cartoons is by sitting at my desk and thinking.
In live action movies, you just hope that everything works. Because the actor may had a bad morning and doesn't play good, or accidents happen continuously. Many things contradict what you are trying to say. But in cartoons, nothing contradict what you want to say.
Most normal boys, as they're growing up, they - in order to become attractive, they might, you know, get good at sports or join a rock band or develop good social skills, and for some reason, I thought that drawing comic books might be my route.
His nose is like a capsized ship, his mouth the size of three, his jaw and cheekbones hefty as armor, and his eyes are iridescent. His face is a room overstuffed with massive furniture.
Style is the image of character.
The unicorn stared at him. Then, "Gary." "Your name is Gary," Sam said. "Yes." "Ah. That's ... not very unicorn-like." Gary scowled. "And what is unicorn-like?" Sam shrugged. "I don't know. Like Princess Moon Cloud or Ethereal Tear or Star Shine.
A rather jolly little pony, quite possibly wearing a straw hat with holes cut out for its ears.
A ridiculous-looking little man. The sort of little man one could never take seriously.
They kind of look like evil lawn gnomes
with a face like a fish pressed to glass; eyes so large they appear distorted. "Is
Nature forgot to shade him off, I think ... A little too boisterous
like the sea. A little too
vehement
like a bull who has made up his mind to consider every
colour scarlet. But I grant a sledge-hammering sort of merit in him!