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  • Comic Books
  • Comic books
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  • Write the first section of your article here.
  • Due to Seth's love of comic books and his work on Atomic County, there are numerous references to comic books throughout the series.
  • Throughout the years, there have been many comic books based upon the ThunderCats animated series. The two most prominent and well known comic companies, DC and Marvel comics, have both had the license at different points. The Marvel comics were published in the 1980's under two imprints: the Star imprint in the U.S.A. and the Marvel UK imprint in the United Kingdom. During DC's run on the comics in the early 2000's, it was published under its Wildstorm imprint.
  • Hobbes also reads comic books. However, as he cannot buy his own, he either borrows or sneaks away Calvin's. As Hobbes takes poor care of them (folding back the covers, doodling on the panels...) Calvin usually forbids him from reading his comics.
  • The Hellgate London Comic Books series follows the story that was shown in early cinematics for the video game. The series is from Dark Horse comics. It runs from #0-#3. These have been compiled into a graphic novel that was released June 20th, 2007. Ian Edginton is the writer behind the comics, which has been labled as "Horror, Action/Adventure" comic series. * Hellgate: London #0 * Hellgate: London #1 * Hellgate: London #2 * Hellgate: London #3 * Hellgate: London TPB
  • For the Babylon 5 universe, nearly all of its offshoot novels and comic book stories to date are sanctioned canon, having been based on outlines written directly by JMS. The comic books published by DC are also fully endorsed, with Straczynski again either having directly written or contributed to all of the issues in one form or another.
  • The following companies have published comic books based on Voltron. * Lion Forge Comics (2016-current) * Dynamite Entertainment (2013-current) * Devil's Due Publishing (2003-2008) * Image Comics (2003) * Dreamwave Comics (2003) * Modern Comics (1985)
  • The Op-Yop was a toy marketed in the 1960's by a company based in Royal Oak, Michigan called Kramer Designs. The company's original location was an office on Adams in the neighboring community of Birmingham. The history we could find was based on a Time Magazine article in 1968 where it was stated that a million of the Op-Yops had been sold and another million were expected to sell by Christmas. In my travels, I have found some additional information including an internal memo relating to some six months worth of advertising that was done on the Soupy Sales Show with Soupy doing the commercials shot in Detroit. There were also memo's to retailers advising them to stock up on the toy to be in sync with the Soupy Sales ads. I tracked down the original molder who made the parts and talked to
  • In 1966, Dell Comics published the first Doctor Who comic book, an adaptation of the Dr. Who and the Daleks movie, as part of the Dell Movie Classics series. Marvel Comics was next, publishing colorized reprints of Doctor Who Magazine comic strips in four issues of Marvel Premiere in 1980 and 1981. Marvel followed that run with Doctor Who, a 23-issue series that picked up where Marvel Premiere left off and was published between 1984 and 1986. In 1989, Marvel UK published a first-print crossover comic strip featuring the Seventh Doctor and the Marvel character Death's Head in the Death's Head comic book series. Other Marvel titles, such as Star-Lord: The Special Edition and The Incomplete Death's Head have featured reprints of Doctor Who Magazine strips. In addition to their standard comic
  • This page gives you the opportunity to redirect to the wiki covering this topic or stay on the Crossgen Comics Database. Clicking on the link below will redirect you to the Comic books Wikipedia article. Take me to the Wikipedia Comic books article. Click here to return to the Crossgen Comics Database main page or just hit your browsers back button to return to your previous page. These Redirect pages can be eliminated in either of two ways. * #1 Create a article of our own for this page. * #2 On every page a Comic books link exists make a direct link to the original Wikipedia article.
  • W.I.T.C.H. is an Italian fantasy/superhero comic series created by Elisabetta Gnone. It tells the story of five teenage girls who are chosen to be the new Guardians of Kandrakar, protectors of the center of the universe from people and creatures who wish to cause harm to it. For this purpose, they have been given powers over the five elements. The new guardians are Will, Irma, Taranee, Cornelia and Hay Lin, whose initials form the title acronym W.I.T.C.H. Lene Kaaberbøl has written nine books taking place in the W.I.T.C.H. universe, published 2002-2003.
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  • Comic Books
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Title
  • Comic Books
abstract
  • Write the first section of your article here.
  • The Op-Yop was a toy marketed in the 1960's by a company based in Royal Oak, Michigan called Kramer Designs. The company's original location was an office on Adams in the neighboring community of Birmingham. The history we could find was based on a Time Magazine article in 1968 where it was stated that a million of the Op-Yops had been sold and another million were expected to sell by Christmas. In my travels, I have found some additional information including an internal memo relating to some six months worth of advertising that was done on the Soupy Sales Show with Soupy doing the commercials shot in Detroit. There were also memo's to retailers advising them to stock up on the toy to be in sync with the Soupy Sales ads. I tracked down the original molder who made the parts and talked to some home workers who assembled them at their homes from 1967 through 1968. The toy was labeled as a psychedelic sensation and was skin packaged on 4-1/4 inch by 14 inch printed chipboard. More can be found out about the recent reincarnation of the op-yop at WWW.op-yop.com
  • Due to Seth's love of comic books and his work on Atomic County, there are numerous references to comic books throughout the series.
  • Throughout the years, there have been many comic books based upon the ThunderCats animated series. The two most prominent and well known comic companies, DC and Marvel comics, have both had the license at different points. The Marvel comics were published in the 1980's under two imprints: the Star imprint in the U.S.A. and the Marvel UK imprint in the United Kingdom. During DC's run on the comics in the early 2000's, it was published under its Wildstorm imprint.
  • Hobbes also reads comic books. However, as he cannot buy his own, he either borrows or sneaks away Calvin's. As Hobbes takes poor care of them (folding back the covers, doodling on the panels...) Calvin usually forbids him from reading his comics.
  • The Hellgate London Comic Books series follows the story that was shown in early cinematics for the video game. The series is from Dark Horse comics. It runs from #0-#3. These have been compiled into a graphic novel that was released June 20th, 2007. Ian Edginton is the writer behind the comics, which has been labled as "Horror, Action/Adventure" comic series. * Hellgate: London #0 * Hellgate: London #1 * Hellgate: London #2 * Hellgate: London #3 * Hellgate: London TPB
  • This page gives you the opportunity to redirect to the wiki covering this topic or stay on the Crossgen Comics Database. Clicking on the link below will redirect you to the Comic books Wikipedia article. Take me to the Wikipedia Comic books article. Click here to return to the Crossgen Comics Database main page or just hit your browsers back button to return to your previous page. These Redirect pages can be eliminated in either of two ways. * #1 Create a article of our own for this page. * #2 On every page a Comic books link exists make a direct link to the original Wikipedia article. Things to think about: * #1 Creating our own page for this article may add a superfluous amount of pages. * #2 Some of these article links may be on hundreds of pages that would need direct links. This article is a . You can help My English Wiki by expanding it.
  • W.I.T.C.H. is an Italian fantasy/superhero comic series created by Elisabetta Gnone. It tells the story of five teenage girls who are chosen to be the new Guardians of Kandrakar, protectors of the center of the universe from people and creatures who wish to cause harm to it. For this purpose, they have been given powers over the five elements. The new guardians are Will, Irma, Taranee, Cornelia and Hay Lin, whose initials form the title acronym W.I.T.C.H. The comic was never published in Japan, and instead a manga based on the comic, with art by Iida Haruko, was published by Kadokawa Shoten in their monthly magazine Gekkan Asuka and later collected in two Tankoban volumes, upon which the comic was canceled. The paperback volumes contained covers by Ehara Daisuke. The only American releases until 2005 were written books adapted from the comic. In 2005, graphic novels containing two issues each were released. The graphic novels are released about every two months, and at the beginning and end of every story there is a pin-up or miniature poster. Lene Kaaberbøl has written nine books taking place in the W.I.T.C.H. universe, published 2002-2003. The final issue was released in October 2012, ending the 139 issue run.
  • In 1966, Dell Comics published the first Doctor Who comic book, an adaptation of the Dr. Who and the Daleks movie, as part of the Dell Movie Classics series. Marvel Comics was next, publishing colorized reprints of Doctor Who Magazine comic strips in four issues of Marvel Premiere in 1980 and 1981. Marvel followed that run with Doctor Who, a 23-issue series that picked up where Marvel Premiere left off and was published between 1984 and 1986. In 1989, Marvel UK published a first-print crossover comic strip featuring the Seventh Doctor and the Marvel character Death's Head in the Death's Head comic book series. Other Marvel titles, such as Star-Lord: The Special Edition and The Incomplete Death's Head have featured reprints of Doctor Who Magazine strips. In addition to their standard comic books, Marvel Adventure Comics from Golden Wonder, a six-issue set of promotional mini-comics, was released in 1986. Miranda, a Doctor Who spin-off comic book featuring the Eighth Doctor's adopted daughter, was published by Comeuppance Comics in 2003, with 3 issues out of a planned 6 being released. In 2007, Idea and Design Works Comics (IDW) started publishing re-colorized reprints of Doctor Who Magazine comic strips in the Doctor Who Classics series. They followed that in 2008 with a series of comic books containing new series strips. Most of these issues have cover variants, including Virgin Incentive, or artwork only covers. In 2012 IDW published Assimilation², the first officially licensed Doctor Who / Star Trek crossover, and for the 50th Anniversary year in 2013, they published the twelve-part Prisoners of Time, which dedicated an entire issue to each of the first eleven Doctors. IDW ceased publishing Doctor Who comic books in December, 2013. In 2010, Titan Books began publishing Torchwood: The Official Comic, which lasted for 6 issues. Titan later picked up the Doctor Who comic book line and started publishing new Tenth, Eleventh and Twelfth Doctor stories in 2014, new Ninth and Eighth Doctor stories in 2015, and new Fourth and Third Doctor stories in 2016. Also in 2015, Titan began publishing a five-issue yearly 'event', starting with Four Doctors, which included the first comic book appearance of the War Doctor, and continuing in 2016 with Supremacy of the Cybermen. Torchwood returned to Titan Comics with an ongoing line starting in 2016 A comic book biography, The Cast of Doctor Who, was first published in 2012 by Bluewater Comics and continued in 2015 by the renamed Stormfront Comics. Many of these stories have been re-released in Graphic Novels. Browse Comic Book releases below.
  • For the Babylon 5 universe, nearly all of its offshoot novels and comic book stories to date are sanctioned canon, having been based on outlines written directly by JMS. The comic books published by DC are also fully endorsed, with Straczynski again either having directly written or contributed to all of the issues in one form or another.
  • The following companies have published comic books based on Voltron. * Lion Forge Comics (2016-current) * Dynamite Entertainment (2013-current) * Devil's Due Publishing (2003-2008) * Image Comics (2003) * Dreamwave Comics (2003) * Modern Comics (1985)
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