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Cartoons meet art


Shipping costs include insurance for this limited edition art print to ensure safe delivery of this very rare piece of music memorabilia. When ordering fine art prints with our other music action figures and rock n roll collectibles, shipping costs may be higher due to the art and music figures shipping from different gallery or warehouse locations


To be able to offer you the highest quality limited edition fine art prints and photos on the market, all of our art prints are shipped directly from one of our fine art gallery partners.


It is an officially licensed product from Apple Corp LTD, the company that holds the rights to all the Beatles products and albums. The manufacturing and distribution of these beautiful limited edition Beatles prints is by RockNToons Animation Studios, LLC.



The Beatles Cartoon Sericel print is an unframed/unmatted print that ships in a deluxe presentation folder. The print measures 14" x 14" and is created and designed by the DenniLu Company.



This limited edition Beatles Cartoon print is one of 500 prints worldwide. In addition to the original 500 prints in this limited edition, there are 50 "publisher's proofs" numbered PP 1/50 to PP 50/50 and 5 hors de commerce numbered, HC 1/5 to 5/5, bringing the total of all images to 555 pieces. Conforming to the practice of fine art printing, the elements used to create the edition are destroyed when the edition is closed.


This great limited edition Beatles print is based on the Beatles 1960's animated cartoon. The print is a sericel print meaning that each color in the print is individually screened with amazing precision.

This work of art is based on the original Beatles character model sheets for the cartoon originally created by artist Peter Sander. The Beatles are shown here as seen on the "Meet the Beatles" album.

Heather is basically a self-taught artist having no true formal art schooling except for a smidgen of fine art training and a pinch of training in different types of crafts.

with a little electronic robot assisting her (!); by being a competitive ballroom dancer (there, you're talking animated cartoons. Some of the things you'd see on the dance floor and in the dressing rooms were enough to send a budding cartoonist off for her drawing tablet!) See our About Us page.

Heather has always been an avid people-watcher and has re-created many of life's comical moments in cartoon form. She has had many opportunities to observe people by being co-owner/assistant D.J./light engineer and computer operator (phew! What a mouth-full!) for a disk jockey service, by owning a personalized banner service (special occasion banners created by computer) and delivering them with Heather clad in a clown suit

After a number of years sketching, painting and crafting, Heather decided to create her own line of whimsical characters. These are incorporated into the comical cartoon designs she creates for personalization; all her little Pet Computer Viruses (a computer novelty designed to bring a bit of comic relief to computer users), the various computer novelties she has to offer, and her monthly comic strip page starring The Pixels Family

Always off somewhere with her materials and artpad in tow, she grew up to be a Jack, 'er Jill of all trades in the artworld from cartooning to fashion design; tole painting to fine art and even stained glass at one time (but had to stop as she was cutting her fingers to shreds!).

Ballroom dance newsletter: One of the best ballroom/latin dance ezines around! Ballroom humor, stories, dance hints and more...more...more in this fun Ballroom Dance Newsletter! Humorous dance articles, ballroom dance jokes, funny dance content, interesting and informative items in the ballroom dancing world, The History of Ballroom and Latin Dancing and so much more!

Subscribe to Dancing On Air Newsletter for Ballroom Dancers. A link in Dancing On Air will be provided so you can pick up your special gift, The Dancer's Notebook, complete with printable forms to use! It's a great new system created to facilitate recording your dance steps and routines; and you can keep track of those all-important dance notes, phone numbers and dates

A huge collection of designs including ballroom, Latin, and many specific designs like tango, salsa, Argentine tango, waltz...even other fun dance designs such as ballet, belly dancing, tap, ballet jazz, line dancing, western line dancing, and much more!!!

In collaboration with CafePress.com, many of our dance designs (even the loveable Pet Computer Virus!) are now available on mugs, t-shirts, wall clocks, mousepads, sweatshirts, caps and more!

The British Cartoon Archive has a library, archive, gallery, and is a registered museum dedicated to the history of British cartooning over the last two hundred years. CartoonHub describes the Centre's holdings, but is also a guide to the holdings of other archives and galleries, including the partners in the RSLP CartoonHub Project.

CartoonHub is also the world's largest electronic archive of cartoons, with a catalogued database of over 90,000 images. The majority of these come from the British Cartoon Archive's collections, but the database also incorporates significant cartoon collections from the National Library of Wales, the Library of the London School of Economics, and the John Rylands University Library of Manchester.

The images on CartoonHub are under copyright, and may only be reproduced with the permission of the copyright owners. The British Cartoon Archive maintains contact with the owners of copyright in all its collections, and is happy to put researchers in touch with them.

The British Cartoon Archive is at the forefront of cartoon collections around the world in that it offers access to its unrivalled archive through an ever expanding computerised database which retrieves both the cataloguing information and the cartoon image. This data includes the cartoonist's name, where and when the cartoon was published, the characters depicted, the caption and the cartoon text. Items of interest such as preliminary sketches, editorial amendments, or caption changes are recorded, along with the size and condition of the cartoon.

In May 1996 the Britich Cartoon Archive started cataloguing the editorial cartoons from the national newspapers, including brief descriptions of the relevant news of the day.


The British Cartoon Archive loans original cartoon artwork to museums and galleries both nationally and worldwide. It also undertakes sponsored touring and commissioned exhibitions.

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