The smoking kid, a watercolor painting from 1947

68 years ago, in 1947, Bob De Moor painted a drawing which has been part of the toilet ornaments of the family De Moor for years. Not surprisingly the drawing remained in the archives of the family De Moor and we can show it today for the very first time. [caption id="attachment_1353" align="alignleft" width="204"] A 1947 drawing by Bob De

Read More

Happy New Year with this 1953 rarity

To end the year in beauty, we're offering you a Christmas/New Year's cartoon which Bob De Moor made for Publiart on December 28th 1953. The original drawing comes from the collection of Olivier Marin, which many will know as artist behind the albums / series "Les déesses de la route", "Le mystère de la traction 22", ... [caption id="attachment_1350" align="alignleft"

Read More

The squint-eyed silver fox cover artwork as drawn by… Johan De Moor

In 1956 the album "De schele zilvervos" (dutch for"The squint-eyed silver fox") by Bob de Moor was released. This 4th album in the 'Nonkel Zigomar, Snoe en Snolleke' series has a peculiar twist in the original cover artwork if you compare it to later editions as we already reported a few months ago. [caption id="attachment_340" align="alignleft" width="210"] The new version

Read More

When Mars and Sabena unite, you get a De Moor wedding!

On September 12, 1992 Stefaan De Moor, the youngest of the 5 De Moor/De Belder children, married his girlfriend, Françoise. The wedding took place only 10 days after the funeral of Bob De Moor. Although it might seem a bit odd to have a wedding so soon after burying a father, it was Bob De Moor himself who insisted that

Read More

Hold-up cartoon by Bob De Moor from the 60s

In 1975 issue 3 of the magazine Stripklub Nieuwsblad (one of the many publications by Karel Driesen) dedicated 7 of its 16 pages (yes, it indeed was really a very small magazine) to Bob De Moor. But it must be said that these pages did include quite a lot of material which you will never find elsewhere. The cartoon we

Read More

Was it Hergé or Bob De Moor who drew the Tijl Uilenspiegel and Lamme Goedzak series? Het Nieuws Van De Dag reveals the truth

On September 7th 1950 the newspaper Het Nieuws Van De Dag announced a brand new story from Bob De Moor, "Het vals gebit" featuring Tijl Uilenspiegel and Lamme Goedzak, which would start the day after. It was the second album which Bob De Moor drew for that series after he debuted earlier that year with "De nieuwe avonturen van Tijl

Read More