Skirmisher Publishing is proud to announce the release of La Baoinnette No. 47: Nos Marins, the second title in the company's centennial commemoration of the Great War! It is available from online venues that include DriveThruRPG, RPGNow, and WargameVault. This download includes a complete PDF copy of La Baoinnette No. 47: Nos Marins, a French magazine published during World War I, and high-resolution TIFF format images of all 35 illustrations that appear in the publication. This issue is dedicated to the French marines and their role in the war and is weighted toward images that depict them. These high-quality graphics can be freely used in publishing projects of all sorts and are especially suited for those tying in with the Great War, the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the classic era of the Cthulhu Mythos.
Skirmisher Publishing is proud to announce the release of La Baoinnette No. 47: Nos Marins, the second title in the company's centennial commemoration of the Great War! It is available from online venues that include DriveThruRPG, RPGNow, and WargameVault (16 pages; 35 stock art images; $4.99). We hope you will enjoy it and say positive things about it on the sites to which you contribute!
This download includes a complete PDF copy of La Baoinnette No. 47: Nos Marins, a French magazine published during World War I, and high-resolution TIFF format images of all 35 illustrations that appear in the publication (seven full-color images at 300 dpi and 28 black-and-white images at 600 dpi). This issue is dedicated to the French marines and their role in the war and is weighted toward images that depict them. These high-quality graphics can be freely used in publishing projects of all sorts and are especially suited for those tying in with the Great War, the late 19th and early 20th centuries, and the classic era of the Cthulhu Mythos.
La Baionnette is a French satirical weekly that was published by cartoonist Henry Maigrot from 1915 to 1920. It was intended to boost French morale and took its name from its editor's practice of using it like a bayonet charge to ridicule Germany, caricaturize leaders like Kaiser Wilhelm II and Crown Prince Wilhelm of Prussia, and make incisive social commentary. Its pages were graced by work from some of France's greatest artists, including ones who were famous before the war or went on to achieve it during the interwar period. Subjects depicted in the publication include soldiers, battlefields, weapons, fashion, and daily life, and run the gamut from humorous to dramatic in tone and from cartoonish to realistic in style.
Other publications in this series include of La Baoinnette No. 44: Les Bleutes (The Blueberries).