Day 27:

What if Charlton Heston crashed on the other side of the planet? You know, the part with the mutated rocks.

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This is Eddie Charlton.
If you knew who Eddie was now is the time to suck air through your teeth and mumble to yourself "Damn, should have got that, it's obvious now".

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Cover art by Sanjay Charlton! Pre-order wherever books are sold: https://t.co/lk47ESTVrA

And hang onto your pre-order receipts--LOTS of gorgeous character art incoming! 👀

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Gorgo and his mum in a good mood after being sated - Charlton comics, early 1960s - after STEVE DITKO :)

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Silver Age Charlton was also home to Romance, like Just Married that ran for 114 issues.

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Charlton Booms in the Silver Age

In the Golden Age, Charlton was an also ran, but somehow in the Silver Age they took off. In part, it might be because they did it all in house, from creation to printing even to distribution.

Hot Rods and Racing Cars ran for years

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spotted these neo Charlton from a few years ago, looks like it is now inactive 😩

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We've mentioned how Gold Key was fond of photo collage covers with colorful polygons, interestingly, Charlton - who had the Partridge Family license - didn't use polygons, despite the famous bus using it - but did use more flowing colorful shapes in a drawn cover.

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The Charlton Lettering

According to https://t.co/6fvnAkTu9u Charlton used a variable typewriter to save money on lettering.

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It's another throwback piece today, continuing the Jack Charlton series that originally ran on Tale of Two Halves.

In part three, recalls the Irish adventure at USA 94...

https://t.co/hUh67x8jZM

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George Wildman did the Charlton run. Was a fun series. The art style wasn't for everyone but I liked it.

I referenced him in my second Sunday strip. https://t.co/uVN2A9qBJI

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Fisticuffs are usually more the province of Charlton's romance comics, but both of those punches are in DC's Heart Throbs One's in the cover story, "The Show Off," which seems to have been inked by Tony DeZuniga. Here's its central conflict:

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"The Faceless Ones" (chapter one)
script: Joe Gill, art: Steve Ditko
from This Magazine Is Haunted#12
(1957 Charlton Publications).

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"Freddy In What An Artist"
(chapter one) script: Joe Gill,
art: Jon D'Agostino, from Freddy#20 (1960 Charlton
Comics)

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Blackest Night was 10/10 for Charlton characters coming back to haunt their legacies

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