Richard Sala, Femme Fatale
Original art from http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryPiece.asp?Piece=497380&GSub=35490
RIP Richard Sala
Richard Sala, Femme Fatale
Original art from http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryPiece.asp?Piece=497380&GSub=35490
RIP Richard Sala
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#Comics #Richard SalaRichard Sala, Femme Fatale
Original art from http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryPiece.asp?Piece=497380&GSub=35490
Richard Sala, Femme Fatale
Original art from http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryPiece.asp?Piece=497380&GSub=35490
Richard Sala, Femme Fatale
Original art from http://www.comicartfans.com/GalleryPiece.asp?Piece=497380&GSub=35490
Original cover art by Richard Sala from The Comics Journal #208, published by Fantagraphics, November 1998.
RIP Richard Sala!
What would supernatural P.I. comics do without a sexy femme fatale making a dramatic entrance?
Nighstalkers #1, November 1992, written by D. G. Chichester, art by Ron Garney (pencils) and Tom Palmer (inks and colors)
Nightstalkers #12, October 1993, written by Steven Grant, art by Vince Giarrano, colors by John Kalisz
Journey Into Mystery #520, May 1998, written by Marv Wolfman, interior art by Karl Kerschl (pencils) and Al
Milgrom (inks), colors by Steve Oliff
What would supernatural P.I. comics do without a sexy femme fatale making a dramatic entrance?
Nighstalkers #1, November 1992, written by D. G. Chichester, art by Ron Garney (pencils) and Tom Palmer (inks and colors)
Nightstalkers #12, October 1993, written by Steven Grant, art by Vince Giarrano, colors by John Kalisz
Journey Into Mystery #520, May 1998, written by Marv Wolfman, interior art by Karl Kerschl (pencils) and Al
Milgrom (inks), colors by Steve Oliff
What would supernatural P.I. comics do without a sexy femme fatale making a dramatic entrance?
Nighstalkers #1, November 1992, written by D. G. Chichester, art by Ron Garney (pencils) and Tom Palmer (inks and colors)
Nightstalkers #12, October 1993, written by Steven Grant, art by Vince Giarrano, colors by John Kalisz
Journey Into Mystery #520, May 1998, written by Marv Wolfman, interior art by Karl Kerschl (pencils) and Al
Milgrom (inks), colors by Steve Oliff
Another rogue’s gallery from Richard Sala books and comics ~
in this case, The Chuckling Whatsit
rat-girl-big-tits asked:
Inside baseball question, but what made you switch from the magazine/comic book style of shortpacked to the newspaper style of dumbing of age? It reminds me of the switch Sabrina Online made when it went from newspaper style to comic book style with Baby Steps.
Shortpacked! was originally intended to be a MWF strip I did in my spare time while doing A Real Job, back when I thought I’d get a traditional real job after graduating college. Each strip was going to be a self-contained thing, without much day-to-day continuity. And so I thought a full-page-sized strip would serve that purpose better. A larger canvas would give me more room to put complete Pop Culture Joke Thoughts into.
Dumbing of Age, though, was always going to be a day-to-day continuity strip, and I thought the traditional newspaper strip shape served that purpose better.