Cole drew cartoon violence better than anyone! Dig the "stop hitting yourself" move and the secondary action of hitting the other guy too in panel 1. Then on the same page- the fist floating untethered and slamming in for the punch. Comics version of the animation smear.


Just learned about the Senorita Rio Comics(1942)-About a Latina actress who was also a a spy and Nazi Hunter. Drawn by one of the first women in comics Lily Rene-a WW2 war refugee accused of being a spy that fled to New York https://t.co/g9L0TPcVci Comics are great.




More digging and I found some Nick Cardy Rio pages (he's credited as co-creator on some sites too)



Milton Caniff showing the raw emotion of two women mourning for the same man in Steve Canyon is some great storytelling. It's melodrama with sincerity.





Take a Toppi Break with me won't you? Master of texture, design, use of negative space and scale.

Today's inspiration Rodolfo Damaggio's Captain America Storyboards

Some Rodolfo Damaggio to end your week right

As comics get more "widescreen" I've really come to appreciate the sweet, skinny, vertical panels of Miller's DD

we do not spend enough time gushing over how great John Bogdanove is. Great Cartooning skills, amazing draftsmanship and gestures. From a new mutants annual and X-terminators

Kurtzman. I want comics to be colored like this again

Urasawa's celebrity portraits are the best

my favorite Neal Adams stuff was his comic strip work...what a legend

Toth famously said " Strip it down to the essentials and Draw the hell out of what's left". Calling something "simple" because of a lack of (over)rendering implies that less lines = less work. Here's Toth keeping it Simple

Little Breakdowns of the "hellboy style" made by @TadStones for the Hellboy animated shows to capture the @artofmmignola magic. So great https://t.co/wiUceHtiKC

Let's spend Monday gushing over Barry Windsor-Smith, shall we? This is the closest we will get to seeing how Michelangelo would've drawn comics. Classic draftsmanship and beautiful storytelling

Eisner