![]() ![]() It all adds up to a very unsatisfactory experience that imposes a weird rhythm on Sunday strips and prevents artists from using the space to its fullest potential.įinally, Watterson suggested a compromise: he would draw a half-page Sunday strip. Readers of some newspapers will only see half of the panels drawn for a Sunday strip by the time editors have finished trimming them. ![]() Worse than this is the requirement to make the top tier and second panel of each Sunday strip disposable elements, so that papers can drop those parts altogether if they want to. Creators have to use a very rigid format of pre-sized panels, which allows papers to alter strips to fit into their newspaper layouts. ![]() This also makes for a much heftier book size where the previous volumes averaged 120 pages each, this collection is 176 pages.īill Watterson has discussed how restrictive he found the standard formatting of Sunday pages. Now there are two daily strips per page rather than three, and each Sunday strip is reproduced on a full colour page, just as it would have appeared in newspapers. ![]() The Days are Just Packed is the same height as previous volumes, but much wider, so that the size of the strips printed inside increases substantially and you can really examine Watterson’s artwork which gets better and better. With this volume, the shape of these ‘Calvin and Hobbes’ reprints changes to a landscape format. This is the eighth volume of Bill Watterson’s collected newspaper strip, but the first to feature Sunday pages in colour. ![]()
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