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Books with title The Art of Cuphead

  • The Art of Cuphead

    Studio MDHR

    (Dark Horse Books, March 17, 2020)
    Get transported back to the golden age of 1930s animation with an art book celebrating the acclaimed run & gun game, Cuphead!Each page of this curated collection of artwork is designed to capture the vintage look and feel of the 1930's. Take a gander at the game's traditional hand-drawn frame-by-frame animation. Peek at the early concepts, production work, and early ideas that went into the making of Cuphead's characters, bosses, stages and more including never-before-seen content from the upcoming DLC! Relive the most cherished and challenging moments of Cuphead and Mugman's adventure to reclaim their souls from The Devil, all in a way you've never seen before! Guided by personal insights from game directors Chad and Jared Moldenhauer, take a one-of-a-kind trip through the Inkwell Isles and discover an all-new appreciation for Cuphead's animation style and challenging retro gameplay.Dark Horse Books and Studio MDHR are thrilled to present The Art of Cuphead! This vintage-style art extravaganza is the perfect book for fans of Cuphead!
  • The Cart Of The Art

    Kashish Chhabra

    (Notion Press, March 14, 2019)
    The book is a compilation of magic, miracles, unicorns, pixie dust and reaching pinnacles. The book talks about the vulnerability one wants to attain in order to showcase the human emotions with courage and without the fear of judgement and unacceptance. Poems speak stories about how one wants to break the ceilings of stereotypes and unsee the banners which say “misfit.” The poems aren't completely related to each other but are bound together through a thin thread of vulnerable human emotions.
  • The Cart Of The Art

    Kashish Chhabra

    (Notion Press, March 12, 2019)
    "The book is a compilation of magic, miracles, unicorns, pixie dust and reaching pinnacles.The book talks about the vulnerability one wants to attain in order to showcase the human emotions with courage and without the fear of judgement and unacceptance.Poems speak stories about how one wants to break the ceilings of stereotypes and unsee the banners which say “misfit.”The poems aren't completely related to each other but are bound together through a thin thread of vulnerable human emotions."