//=time() ?>
@AllThingsVampi Big fan of Amanda Conner's art - she also does a good Starfire
#Top10 #girls of #comics: #Vampirella (honorable mention) - Blood-Red Queen of Hearts (Warren - Dynamite 1976) #art by Al Rio
Honorable mention also to Vampirella adversary Blood Red Queen of Hearts - recurring, immortal body-hopping villainess @AllThingsVampi
In her deliberately campy origin story, she is an alien vampire – part of a race that evolved on the planet Drakulon, a world in which the water was blood (just go with it, ok?)
And she came to Earth, obviously packing only her holiday swimwear and boots (#art by Amanda Conner)
#Top10 #girls of #comics:
(2) #Vampirella (Warren - Dynamite 1969) #art by Stanley "Artgerm" Lau and #cosplay by Christina Fink / Kalinka Fox
The original classic ‘bad girl’ of comics
The one you've been waiting for @LetsTalkVampi @let_sonja @CatwomanGoddess
Loosely based on an earlier character, Red Sonya, in a short story by Conan’s creator Robert E. Howard - but not one of his actual Conan stories (#art by Ed Benes)
#Top10 #gIrls of #comics:
(3) #RedSonja (Marvel - Dynamite 1973) #art by Lucio Parrillo
She-devil with a sword.
@let_sonja @LetsTalkVampi
And of course she's featured against her fellow comics vampire, Vampirella @LetsTalkVampi
Not just demon or vampire, she was both – a vampire queen from ancient Egypt (where else?), who was then transformed into demon queen of hell. With hells like these, who needs heaven?
Written by Brian Pulido, she originated as an outright villainous figure, a supernaturally pale beautiful female personification of death, but subsequently took shape as an anti-hero or hero
The female embodiment (in every sense of the word) of the nineties antihero in the 'Dark Age of comics' – typically dark action girls or avengers, anti-heroic or villainous in nature, with supernatural or occult themes, and above all, voluptuously statuesque and stripperiffic.