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"In this massive bombardment of events which are no longer tied together by any strand of logic, whose interaction is ruled no longer by any necessity, the reader loses the notion of temporal progression" - Eco
Woman: The Eternal Question (1905)
by Charles Dana Gibson
The Gibson Girl
Buster Brown is a well to do schoolboy, and a prankster who often says he will behave better but doesn't really mean it.
What do different fabrics say about this Superman? Patched jeans, boots and a tee-shirt, or a more classic trunkless costume with all those 'armor lines'?
Alan Scott, the Green Lantern from the Golden Age, is often seen in thick attire. Worksman's attire. No spandex here. When Hal Jordan, normally in the well known GL spandex, went Parallax, he is armored up. What a great visual device for that character at that moment.
I don't think we think about fabrics too much in comic books. We notice when our comic book characters are translated to television or movies (so much dark leather!), but within comic books fabrics can be meaningful (as well as color)
https://t.co/z0cC5wMfNv
@ComicsintheGA I hear a man loses his scruples when sent to the Joint.
"...the greater the capacity to sustain itself through an indefinite series of contrasts, oppositions, crises, and solutions, the more vital it seems." - Eco
(more later)
A few more of those 1909 tobacco cards. I don't collect cards myself, but if I did, I'd look for novel ones like these.
Legal Dept: The posting of these Peanuts stamps does not endorse absentee parenting, nor the practice of psychology as practiced by unlicensed minors. Please check the thickness of ice before going onto a frozen pond. Please skate responsibly. Keep warm.