

According to the artist, the diptych took one month to produce from start to finish (Lichtenstein, letter to Richard Morphet, 10 July 1967, Tate Catalogue file). This use of different materials has made cleaning the painting a particular challenge for conservators (see ‘Conserving Whaam!’, Tate website, 1 March 2018,, accessed 7 November 2018). Onto this he painted the thick outlines of shapes and areas of solid colour in Magna acrylic resin paint. This involved using a homemade aluminium mesh and pushing oil paint through the holes with a small scrubbing brush. To make the final painting, Lichtenstein projected the preparatory study onto the two pre-primed canvases and drew around the projection in pencil before applying the Ben-Day dots. Revealing Lichtenstein’s process of making minor changes during a work’s creation, the colour annotations on the drawing are different to the final colours used in the painting, notably the use of yellow instead of white for the letters of ‘WHAAM!’.

In this drawing, he set out his first visualisation of the painting, including marking the divide of the original single panel into two parts, confining the main plane to one and the explosion to the other. From the original panel, Lichtenstein produced preliminary drawings, one of which is in Tate’s collection ( Drawing for ‘Whaam!’ 1963, Tate T01131). The work’s composition is taken from a panel drawn by Irv Novick which appeared in issue number 89 of All-American Men of War, published by DC Comics in February 1962. The painting is rendered in the formal tradition of machine-printed comic strips – thick black lines enclosing areas of primary colour and lettering, with uniform areas of Ben-Day dots, purple for the shading on the main fighter plane and blue for the background of the sky.

The outline of the resulting explosion emanates in yellow, red and white the work’s onomatopoeic title, ‘WHAAM!’, jags diagonally upwards to the left from the fireball in yellow, as if in visual response to the words of the pilot. The left-hand canvas features an American fighter plane firing a missile into the right-hand canvas and hitting an approaching enemy plane above the American plane, the words of the pilot appear in a yellow bubble: ‘I PRESSED THE FIRE CONTROL… AND AHEAD OF ME ROCKETS BLAZED THROUGH THE SKY…’. These files are included in the app’s asset bundle.Whaam! 1963 is a large, two-canvas painting by the American pop artist Roy Lichtenstein that takes its composition from a comic book strip. These files contain the outlines for the glyphs in the font. The family determines the name of the font, which you use in theįontFamily property of a TextStyle object. It’s common practice to put font files in a fonts or assetsįor example, to import the Raleway and Roboto Mono fontįiles into a project, the folder structure might look like this:įlutter : fonts : - family : Raleway fonts : - asset : fonts/Raleway-Regular.ttf - asset : fonts/Raleway-Italic.ttf style : italic - family : RobotoMono fonts : - asset : fonts/RobotoMono-Regular.ttf - asset : fonts/RobotoMono-Bold.ttf weight : 700 pubspec.yaml option definitions To work with a font, import the font files into the project. This recipe creates an app that uses custom fonts with To over 1,000 open-sourced font families.įor another approach to using custom fonts,Įspecially if you want to re-use one font over multiple projects,įlutter works with custom fonts and you can apply a customįont across an entire app or to individual widgets. Or perhaps you downloaded a font from Google Fonts.Ĭheck out the google_fonts package for direct access One of the most common requests from designers is for custom fonts.įor example, you might have a custom-built font from a designer,
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Although Android and iOS offer high quality system fonts,
