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THE JEWELS OF CASTAFIORE - Journal Tintin special edition.
In the early sixties, The Adventures of Tintin was beginning to reap success. Hergé, who was beginning to pay special attention to contemporary art, decided to break the creative rules and do something surprising. And he succeeded. Before conceiving the definitive album edition, known all over the world, the cartoonist had produced a first version published in Tintin magazine, the originals of which had been lying in the archives for 60 years. Carefully and meticulously restored, these documents allow us today to show the public The Jewels of the Castafiore as it appeared in its entirety, between 1961 and 1962, in the weekly magazine for young people from 7 to 77 years old.
Characteristics:
Cardboard binding
80 pages
Size: 24 x 32 cm
1st edition, November 2023
THE JEWELS OF CASTAFIORE - Journal Tintin special edition.
In the early sixties, The Adventures of Tintin was beginning to reap success. Hergé, who was beginning to pay special attention to contemporary art, decided to break the creative rules and do something surprising. And he succeeded. Before conceiving the definitive album edition, known all over the world, the cartoonist had produced a first version published in Tintin magazine, the originals of which had been lying in the archives for 60 years. Carefully and meticulously restored, these documents allow us today to show the public The Jewels of the Castafiore as it appeared in its entirety, between 1961 and 1962, in the weekly magazine for young people from 7 to 77 years old.
Characteristics:
Cardboard binding
80 pages
Size: 24 x 32 cm
1st edition, November 2023
This Tintin adventure is about the struggle between the big oil companies. It all starts when adulterated gasoline invades the market. Tintin travels to the country of Khemed, where a power struggle pits Emir Ben Kalish Ezab against Bab El Ehr, each financed by a different oil company. Enter the terrible Abdalah, the emir's son. Hergé was inspired by a photograph of the real King Faisal II as a child. This album has gone through numerous versions before knowing its final form. It began to appear on September 25, 1939 in Le Petit Vingtième, following King Ottokar's Sceptre, but the war broke out. On May 9, 1940, the German forces entered Brussels and the publication of Le Petit Vingtième was interrupted, and with it, Tintin in land of black gold. The story stops on the current page 26 of the album, and will not be continued until 6 years later in Tintin magazine.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
Tintin travels on a cruise ship bound for the Far East. On board he meets the strange Egyptologist Philemon Cyclone, who is traveling in search of the tomb of the Egyptian pharaoh Kih-Oskh. Tintin accompanies him to the tomb and there he discovers the mysterious cigars, which hide more than just tobacco. He is then kidnapped and abandoned at sea, but is saved and lands in Arabia. After numerous vicissitudes he ends up in India, where he stays with the Maharaja of Rawhajpurtalah. Here appear characters that we will meet again later: the ineffable policemen Thomson and Thompson, the evil Rastapopoulos and the peculiar Oliveira de Salazar. Cigars of the Pharaoh begin to appear in Le petit Vingtiéme on December 8, 1932. It was the time when the news of the curse of Tutankhamun's tomb occupied many pages of the tabloids. This subject interested Hergé so much that years later he raised it again in The Seven Crystal Balls.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
This work began to be published in the weekly magazine Tintin on March 30, 1950, nineteen years before the arrival of man on the moon. It is not science fiction but an anticipation as accurate as possible. Hergé contacted Dr. Bernard Heuvelmans, author of the book L'homme parmis les étoiles (Man Among the Stars), a specialist on the subject, who collaborated with the team. An extraordinary model of the rocket was made and submitted for the approval of Ananolf, author of the book Astronautics. It was entirely dismountable and allowed the young Bob de Moor, who was mainly responsible for the scenery, to know where the characters were in the spaceship at all times. Hergé has the grace to give a humorous tone to all the scenes of scientific explanations that could bore the reader. Thus, when Wolf and Professor Calculus explain more or less complicated elements, Captain Haddock is there to make us smile with his replies.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
This is a comic masterpiece. We prefer not to explain the plot of the story here, so that those who read it for the first time can fully enjoy it. From the very beginning, the events are chained together at a fast pace: an explosion is heard, a storm breaks out, objects break, the power goes out and Serafin Brass arrives for the first time in the series. There will be virtually no downtime in the entire story. For the creation of the sets, Hergé wanted to be as precise as possible. The story, which takes place mostly in Switzerland, reflects the Cold War, which was going through very tense moments between the two blocs, represented in the rivalry between Borduria and Syldavia. The Calculus Affair was published in 1956.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
The Secret of the Unicorn & The Treasure of Rackham the Red (Double Album)
Tintin buys a model of an old galleon at the old market. It turns out to be a replica of the ship that governed the ancestor of Captain Haddock, the knight Hadoque, who fought against the pirate Rackham the Red, who carried on his ship a great treasure that has been hidden for centuries. This book includes the two albums of Tintin's adventures, The Secret of the Unicorn and The Treasure of Rackham the Red, in a single volume.
Measurements: 19.5 x 26 cm
Cardboard
128 pages
Languages available:
English
This second installment of Tintin's lunar adventure was first published in 1954 (15 years before the first manned Apollo 11 moon landing. As in the first part, Destination Moon, Hergé did exhaustive research for the realization of this album. In fact, the realism of these two books led Paris-Match magazine to commission Hergé to illustrate the explanation of the Apollo 12 mission.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
La Castafiore announces her arrival in Moulinsart, and the captain tries to flee the trip in a hurry, but stumbles on a broken step that they have not yet come to fix and breaks his ligaments. The rumor of a sentimental relationship between the singer and the "old sea dog" is born and everything is full of paparazzi. And the jewels disappear... In this album there are no travels or great adventures, and that is the grace of Hergé to maintain the intrigue. All the action takes place in Moulinsart, in and around the gardens of the castle. As Hergé himself tells us: "When I started this album, my intention was also to simplify, to train myself to tell, this time, a story in which nothing happens, without resorting to exoticism. Simply to see if I could keep the reader in suspense until the end.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
Following the trail of a mysterious can of crab, Tintin ends up prisoner on a ship owned by a gang of opium traffickers. There he meets the evil Allan and for the first time Captain Haddock, then a pathetic slave of his addiction to alcohol, a vice that causes innumerable problems for him and for Tintin who tries to help him. The captain's rehabilitation will come after his forced detoxification during his desert crossing. On May 10, German troops enter Belgium, interrupting the publication of Tintin in land of black gold. Disaster looms over the whole country. Hergé, with his daughter and his sister-in-law, left for Paris on May 15, and from there they went to a friend's house in the Aubergne region, to await events. On June 30 they returned to Brussels and there Hergé found that Le Vingtième Siècle had died, and with it Le Petit Vingtième had also disappeared.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
Juventud -Tintin- The Crab With The Golden Claws (Special Edition 80th Anniversary Haddock)
Special edition of the album in Spanish and Catalan of The Crab with the Golden Claws, the first adventure of Tintin in which Captain Haddock appears. This book is presented with eight unpublished pages and in a larger format than the standard comic book.The Crab with the Golden Claws is the ninth adventure devised by Hergé and begins with Tintin following the trail of a mysterious can of crab. Tintin ends up imprisoned on a ship owned by a gang of opium traffickers. There he meets the evil Allan and for the first time Captain Haddock, then a pathetic slave of his addiction to alcohol, a vice that brings countless problems to him and to Tintin who tries to help him. The captain's rehabilitation will come after his forced detoxification during his desert crossing.
This is a special edition published by Editorial Juventud with original translations by Conchita Zendrera (Spanish) and Joaquim Ventalló (Catalan).
Characteristics of the book:
Language: Spanish
Cardboard cover
Measurements: 31'7 x 23'7 cm.
8 extra pages
Year of issue: 2021
Tintin buys a model of an old galleon at the old market. It turns out to be a replica of the ship that Captain Haddock's ancestor, the knight Hadoque, commanded, who fought against the pirate Rackham the Red, who carried on his ship a great treasure that has been hidden for centuries. This story was first published in Le Soir on June 11, 1942, during the occupation of Belgium, and was one of Hergé's favorite albums. For the design of the Unicorn, Hergé relied on precise documentation of 17th century ships in the Paris Navy Museum.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
Tintin and the Art-Alpha, unfinished album, is finally part of the 23 other adventures of Tintin. In the months following Hergé's death on March 3, 1983, speculation was rife: many readers wanted the master's collaborators to finish the story. But Hergé was clear: there would be no new Tintins after him. Finally, in 1986, a luxurious album was published, in two booklets, with the main sketches of the cartoonist. A few years after the publication of Tintin and the Picaros, and shortly before the fiftieth anniversary of his hero, Hergé chose as the setting for his next album the world of contemporary art, which he knew particularly well. He throws Tintin into it without knowing very well where this story was going to lead him. Hergé works sporadically, wishing not to disappoint his readers, but illness overtakes him and soon convinces him that this adventure will never be finished and that it will become Tintin's last adventure.
"If others were to take up Tintin, they might do it better, or worse, but one thing is certain: they would do it differently, and then it would no longer be Tintin" (Hergé).
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
A meteorite is heading towards the earth and many are predicting the end of the world. Tintin goes to the astronomical observatory where he meets Professor Calys. Fortunately, the omens are not fulfilled and only a fragment of the meteorite reaches the earth, falling into the Arctic Ocean. When he notices the presence of an unknown element, Professor Calys organizes an expedition on the ship Aurora, in which Tintin and Captain Haddock take part. The Shooting Star will be the first album already designed in color and was published in 1942.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
Tintin In The Land Of The Soviets - Special Color Edition - CASTELLANO
Created in 1929, this first Tintin adventure surprises by a new and modern legibility when it was colored in 2016, long after Hergé's disappearance. Already endowed with an enthusiastic energy, Tintin in this adventure gets into a powerful convertible car and, to express speed, Hergé lifts his bangs from his forehead... forever, in a toupee that will remain his signature physical feature. The young author was 21 years old and had always shown great skill with the pencil without having studied drawing. He did not know that he had just created a hero who would become universal and mythical in the course of his twenty-four Adventures...
1st edition, October 2022
Hardcover, 23 x 30 cm
144 pages
English
This album marks a return to adventure. It begins to appear in the weekly Tintin, in September 1966, four years after the end of The Castafiore Emerald. Here we meet again Rastatopoulos, whom we thought drowned at the end of The Red Sea Sharks, and his friend Allan. A new figurine appears: the very rich Lazlo Carreras, the man who never laughs. Carreiras is a millionaire owner of airairplanes, oil companies and the Sani-Cola beverage. This character was inspired by Marcel Dassault. He is a paradoxical character: he is among the good guys, but under the effect of the truth serum he is portrayed as a being without scruples when it comes to having amassed his fortune. Towards the end of the story we discover Mik Ezdaditoff, a character inspired by Jacques Bergier, author of the book Le Matin des magiciens and animator of the magazine Planète. We see here Hergé's fascination with paranormal and extraterrestrial phenomena.
Translated by Concepción Zendrera
23 x 30 cm
Cardboard
64 pages
The Adventures of Tintin - Tintin And The Moon, Double Album
Special edition of the double adventure of Tintin on the Moon on the occasion of the 50th anniversary of the arrival of man on the Moon, although Tintin stepped on the lunar surface 14 years earlier. This book is made up of the two installments that narrate the space voyage created by Hergé in Destination Moon and Explorers on the Moon. This double album brings together the two original adventures in the usual format of the albums published by Juventud, but in a single volume with both comics. The edition has the original translation by Concepción Zendrera into Spanish.
Characteristics:
Edition: May 2019 (first)
Cardboard
Measurements: 22.5 x 30.5 cm.
Pages: 128
Cover postcard Le Petit Vingtième - Le Lotus Bleu No. 36.
Postcard size: 12,4 x 17,5 cm
Country of manufacture: Belgium
Year of production: 2023
Tintin mug - Tintin and Snowy - Cigars of the Pharaoh (colored), Tintinimaginatio 2022
Now arriving are these beautiful mugs ideal for coffee, tea, chocolates, broths... that will brighten up your day to day. On one side, in black and white and on the other in color.
T-shirt Tintin 100% Cotton - Haddock Wouah Red.
Red short-sleeved T-shirt with Haddock drawing
From Flight 714 to Sydney, cartoon page 3
Characteristics:
Material: 100% cotton
Manufacturing: design (Belgium) and production (Portugal)
Sizes: Child and adult
AVIÓN 42 - AVIÓN Y ESTATUILLA DEL PROFESOR HALAMBIQUE -EL CETRO DE OTTOKAR
Este modelo de la serie de aviones Tintín es fiel a los diseños del álbum Le Sceptre de Ottokar y está diseñado con materiales de alta calidad. El avión del profesor Halambique está acompañado por una estatuilla de su piloto. El modelo está fabricado en metal y plástico inyectado, las piezas están pintadas a mano y el conjunto está embalado en un cilindro transparente.
Double postcard Tintin - Moulinsart Castle (27,9 x 10,5 cm)
We are sure that these new Tintin postcards will create a sensation. Their extra long format will allow you to make great and unforgettable dedications and they all come with envelopes. Each of them corresponds to different moments of The Adventures of Tintin:
- Tintin and Haddock arriving at the castle of Moulinsart
Notebook - Tintin drinking his tea. A shopping list, a love letter or anything else that comes to mind always starts better in a nice notebook. Take your pen and let your inspiration guide you!
Dimensions: 8.5 x 12.5 cm.
THE JEWELS OF CASTAFIORE - Journal Tintin special edition.
In the early sixties, The Adventures of Tintin was beginning to reap success. Hergé, who was beginning to pay special attention to contemporary art, decided to break the creative rules and do something surprising. And he succeeded. Before conceiving the definitive album edition, known all over the world, the cartoonist had produced a first version published in Tintin magazine, the originals of which had been lying in the archives for 60 years. Carefully and meticulously restored, these documents allow us today to show the public The Jewels of the Castafiore as it appeared in its entirety, between 1961 and 1962, in the weekly magazine for young people from 7 to 77 years old.
Characteristics:
Cardboard binding
80 pages
Size: 24 x 32 cm
1st edition, November 2023