FelineFire app for iPhone and iPad
Developer: International Design Company (IDC) Limited
First release : 15 May 2014
App size: 57.59 Mb
FelineFire is proud to present the best and largest collection of traditional Chinese comics, combining the charms of Chinese traditional stories and literature, and unique art techniques, beautifully re-adapted with today’s digital technology.
For the first time, traditional Chinese comics are vividly presented in digital format. Download now and experience the greatest works of traditional Chinese comics like never before!
Optimized for iPad and iPhone, FelineFire’s free app is the best way to read traditional Chinese comics, and is a great source of entertainment and education for both you and your child, featuring:
• A vivid and user-friendly reading environment
• A reader modeled with modern digital technology which maximizes the artistic beauty of traditional Chinese comics
• A massive collection of Chinese classics
• An extended preview of all books at no cost
• All titles available in simplified Chinese and traditional Chinese, and selected titles also in English
The app is filled with traditional Chinese comic classics, which typically feature not only outstanding artwork created by well-known artists in traditional Chinese brush-painting style, but also well-crafted scripts based on Chinese mythology, folklore, novels, and real-life stories. These works represent both literary value as well as a unique form of artistic expression, entertaining and educating generations of readers, young and old.
Traditional Chinese comics, commonly known in China as “lianhuanhua”, is typically comic-strip style picture book depicting Chinese traditional stories or novels; the name in Chinese essentially translates to “linked pictures” or “serial pictures”.
Traditional Chinese comics is unique in style with characteristics of Chinese traditional art, including, for example, “baimiao” (meaning “white reproduction”, a brush technique in Chinese painting that produces a finely controlled, supple ink outline drawing without any color or wash embellishment).
Traditional Chinese comics started to gain popularity in China in the 1920s in Shanghai, and entered its “golden age” between 1949 (the inception of the People’s Republic of China) and 1966 (before the Cultural Revolution) in China, becoming an important part of children’s educational readings and also adults’ entertainment, with numerous prestigious artists contributing to some of the best works of Chinese comics of all times.
If you have any questions, please contact us at contact@felinefire.com.