he wered red
* ---- i like bubba stone!! ALOT!!
Thomas Nast was an illustrator who lived between 1840 and 1902. He was hired by Coca-Cola to redesign the image of Santa Claus because the current image of him at that time (green clothing) represented a rival company that sold lemonade. Santa was also originally thin and tall. Thomas Nast added red clothing and made Santa plump. The historically incorrect image of Santa (Saint Nicholas) that we see today.
No this is not true. There is no such thing in the Bible. But the god of this system Satan the Devil made him. Compare 1John 5:19.AnswerYES! If you regard Santa as simply 'Father Christmas' then the answer is 'no', as 'Father Christmas' is simply the personification of the Christmas spirit. However God DID make Santa (or at least the original Santa) as Santa was originally 'Santa Claus' in Dutch, or 'Saint Nicholas' in English.Saint Nicholas was a bishop in Myra, Turkey who was renowned as a doer of charitable things. As a person who is reputed to have saved children from both prostitution and death he became the patron saint of children. He was truly a man made in the image of God as a child of God's creation.
A transformation that creates a mirror image of the original image is called a reflection. This transformation flips the image across a line called the axis of reflection, creating a mirror image that is a flipped version of the original.
The original name of Santa Claus is "Saint Nicholas".St.Nicholas
There is no American image it is still the Dutch version.
Santa's name before Santa was Kris Kringle.
An original image and a shading image.
On the Dole
With a scale factor of 1, the image is exactly the same size as the original object.
The website Holidays contains a history of the mythology of Santa and his reindeer, including the original poem that spawned the image. The story of Rudolph originates from the 1939 book "Rudolph The Red-Nosed Reindeer" by Robert May. For fictional portrayals, see Tim Allen's "The Santa Clause" trilogy.