Free cartoon to use on a Mother's Day card
You can use this for free in a Mother’s Day card. Download the high resolution version of the cartoon via one of the links below. I’ve done a version without the ‘Happy Mother’s Day’ in case you feel that is more appropriate. In Internet Explorer you can save the cartoon onto your computer by right…
You can use this for free in a Mother’s Day card. Download the high resolution version of the cartoon via one of the links below. I’ve done a version without the ‘Happy Mother’s Day’ in case you feel that is more appropriate. In Internet Explorer you can save the cartoon onto your computer by right clicking on the link, then selecting ‘ Save Target As…’, choosing where you want to store the image on your computer, then clicking ‘Save’. In Firefox right click on the link and select ‘Save Link As…’.
Download high resolution version with Happy Mother’s Day greeting as above
Download high resolution version without the ‘Happy Mother’s Day’
As far as making it into a card goes, probably the easiest would probably be to print it onto a sheet of A4 card in landscape format then fold it in half. I’m not sure how well the image will work if you try an A5 card folded in half as it might be a bit small to work. See the FAQ page for advice on putting cartoons into a document, resizing them and things like that.
I’m not asking for any payment, but if you’re a blogger a link or a place on your sidebar would be nice, and it always makes me happy when people subscribe to the site feed. Passing the address of this site onto anyone who is repsonsible for a church magazine or anything like that is also highly appreciated.
If you’d like to use this cartoon in any sort of publication please see this page for the particulars of my terribly reasonable licence fees.
I’ve added this cartoon to the main site (here) as well, along with all my other church-related cartoons.
I have been wondering is there any actual evidence that hundreds of years ago people went back to their “Mother Church” on Mothering Sunday or is this just wishful thinking (by people who run cathedrals) or was Mothering Sunday only really celebrated here when it was made a National Holiday in America?