Images of Cruella De Vilfrom the One Hundred and One Dalmatians franchise. 1 External Galleries 2 Promotional 2.1 One Hundred and One Dalmatians 2.2 101 Dalmatians (Live-Action) 2.3 Once Upon a Time 2.3.1 Photography 2.4 Descendants 2.5 Cruella 3 Concept and production 3.1 One Hundred and One Dalmatians 3.2 101 Dalmatians 3.3 102 Dalmatians 3.4 Once Upon a Time 3.5 Cruella 4 Video games 5. Apr 7, 2017 - Explore Joe Taylor's board 'Cruella De Vil' on Pinterest. See more ideas about cruella deville, cruella, cruella de vil. Fashion Sketches. Another trip down memory lane.... Jan 22, 2021 - Explore Owen Dawson's board 'Cruella Deville', followed by 128 people on Pinterest. See more ideas about cruella, cruella deville, cruella de vil.

Get inside the creative mind of one of Disney’s most iconic villains, Cruella De Vil, from the Walt Disney Studios film Cruella! Inside this personal diary with fashion sketches throughout, readers will get a first-person account of the events of Walt Disney Studios’ Cruella from the titular character’s unique point of view. Here’s My Drawing Of Our Iadanza Cruella De Vil!!!
:x: Original Images Are Not Mine :x:
Background

Disney's first and most critically acclaimed version of this character appeared in 'One Hundred and One Dalmatians'. This version of the character inherited several visual traits from the original Dodie Smith version: her hair, which was black on one side and white on the other; her black dress; and her enormous mink coat, which swings about her like a cloak. This version of the character, designed by [[Bill Peet]] and [[Marc Davis]], was also completely skeletal, and smoked constantly, leaving a trail of green, foul-smelling cigarette smoke wherever she went. Her physical appearance and general manner was described as some sort of hellish beast or demon, a fact referenced in her name and in a song about her.
Cruella, an old school friend of Anita's, claims that she cannot live without furs. She hires Horace and Jasper; Horace and Jasper Badun. Two incompetent crooks, to steal Pongo and Perdita's 15 Dalmatian Puppies and buys eighty-four more through legitimate means. She intends to have all ninety nine puppies skinned and made into clothing. The Colonel, Sergeant Tibbs and Captain are among the animals of the countryside to help Pongo, Perdita and the puppies return home, while Cruella and the Baduns pursue them.
Unlike previous Disney villainesses such as the Evil Queen, Lady Tremaineand Maleficent, Cruella is not a schemer. Instead, she acts purely on impulse and is thus prone to reckless behavior, particularly tearing through the snowy landscape in her car. Unlike future versions of the character, this version of Cruella was seemingly invincible in the eyes of the Dalmatians, who, though they could just about be able to keep Jasper and Horace Badun at bay, were unable to face 'that devil woman'. Their only hope was therefore to flee; Cruella's defeat in the film is brought about not through the deeds of the animals but her own stubborn relentlessness (which, by the end of the film, has seemingly degenerated into a mad fury), and the incompetence of her henchmen.
Design
Cruella De Vil Disney
Though Cruella's basic appearance, in particular her half black, half white hair, were established in Dodie Smith's original novel, the character's design in the film was developed by Bill Peet (who described Cruella as 'a fiendish witch of a woman' who 'made the story go'), Ken Anderson and Marc DavisIn sketches exploring designs for Cruella, Marc Davis experimented with more youthful-looking versions of the character. The juxtaposition of the enormous coat against the rail-thin body was established in these early sketches.
Davis exaggerated the size of the coat to match Cruella's larger-than-life personality, and added three big tails to its back to add a 'slightly ridiculous' element; the coat's red clothing was intended to allude to the character's somewhat demonic nature (and corresponding name). The disheveled style of Cruella's hair was inspired by hairdos seen in magazines between the 1940s and 1960s. The long green cigarette holder was modeled on one used by Davis himself.
Cruella De Vil Movie
Artist: Dawn |
Date Added: June 4, 2009 |
Steps: 8 |
Favorited: 0 |
Views: 0 in last hour, 6 in last day, 53 in last week, 75323 total |
Comments: 0 |
Tags: |
Description: There is one Disney cartoon character that I did not submit as a tutorial yet and I can’t believe that I totally forgot to do it. I was thinking about what Disney character I didn’t have a lesson on and then it hit me, “Cruella De Vil. That is who I am going to teach you how to draw step by step. Cruella is the main villain in the animated Disney flick and she is a real “devil” of a woman. As a matter of fact she is so vial, Roger (the young man that owns one of the main Dalmatian dogs named Pongo), writes a catchy song about her during the second half of the movie and it goes something like this; “Cruella De Vil, Cruella De Vil, if she doesn't scare you no evil thing will, to see her is to take a sudden chill, Cruella, Cruella, the curl in her lips the ice in her stare the innocent children better beware she's like a spider waiting for the kill Look out for Cruella De Vil at first you think Cruella is a devil But after time has worn away the shock You come to realize you've seen her kind of eyes watching you from underneath a rock this vampire bat, this inhuman beast She ought to be locked up and never released the world was such a wholesome place until Cruella, Cruella De Vil”. I mean there is more to the song than that but I’m not going to go that far into it. Anyways, Cruella has a desire to make all kinds of fur clothing ranging from coats, gloves, shawls, scarves and much more. The only problem she has is that there is not enough black spotted animals that she can make her clothing line from. After some careful consideration she realizes that Dalmatians have white colored fur with black spots. “Of course“, she thought of an idea that could make her life long dream possible, steal thousands of Dalmatian puppies, kill them and take their fur. The character of Cruella De Vil came from a 1956 novel written by Dodie Smith called “The Hundred and One Dalmatians”. In 1961 Disney made an animated adaptation of the popular book and called it “101 Dalmatians” followed by “102 Dalmatians”. Did you know that Cruella De Vil is a hidden meaning of “cruel devil”? It’s true, the evil character was purposely named to represent a pure evil woman who cares and feels no emotion for any living human or beast. In fact the only person she does love is herself. In the feature full length movie it was Glen Close that played the evil Cruella and I have to say, she did an awesome job. Teaching yourself “how to draw Disney characters” can go two ways, easy and hard. The way that I laid out this tutorial for you all will teach you “how to draw Cruella De Vil from 101 Dalmatians step by step with ease. I have to leave you once again my friend but I will return once again. Have fun with this lesson and be sure to be as creative as you can be. Peace out! |
