starting at: $750.00+
It's Official, Lady and the Tramp is the 13th Disney Dreams Release by Thomas Kinkade Studios. This painting was formatted and designed by Thomas Kinkade. However, Thomas Kinkade did pass before completion of this painting. As a result, an accumulation of licensed Disney painters helped finish the painting and much like how Walt Disney's passing did not affect the quality of his future success movies, Thom's passing has not affected the quality of this release.
Lady and the Tramp by Thomas Kinkade Studios, like Thomas Kinkade's previous Disney Dreams releases, includes a collection of all the characters and the entire story in just this one image. You'll not only find the Cocker Spaniel Lady and her mutt love Tramp displaying their love by making their prints in a heart. You'll also find Jock the Scottish Terrier, Trusty the bloodhound, Tramp's fellow strays Peg and Bull, the trouble making Siamese cats and the rat, Jim Dear, Darling, the Italian Restaurant, the dog catcher, and their surrounding neighborhood. You'll also find 4 hidden Mickey Mouse ears and ten of the characters from the 10 previous Disney Dreams releases. The gorgeous sunset over the beautiful victorian city will sell this painting alone.
Lady and the Tramp was the 15th release by Walt Disney Studios in 1955. Thomas Kinkade's Lady and the Tramp is a true classic. .
Interesting Trivia about the Lady and the Tramp:
- The opening scene in which Darling unwraps a hat box on Christmas morning and finds Lady inside is based upon an actual incident in Walt Disney's life. After Walt had forgotten a dinner date with his wife, he offered her the puppy in the hat box surpirse and was immediately forgiven.
- Before animating the fight between Tramp and the rat, animator Wolfgang Reitherman kept rats in a cage next to his desk to study their actions.
- The film's setting was inspired by Walt Disney's boyhood hometown of Marceline, Missouri.
- To maintain a dog's perspective, Darling and Jim Dear's faces are rarely seen in the film..
- Walt Disney originally didn't want to include the "Bella Note" Spaghetti eating scene, now one of the most iconic moments in Disney films. .