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#Bill Everett
616mattfoggymoments · 6 months
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Daredevil (1964) #1 | Stan Lee & Bill Everett
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curtvilescomic · 5 months
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Bill Everett
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weirdlookindog · 3 months
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Adventures Into Terror #10 - Atlas, June 1952.
Cover art by Bill Everett and Carl Burgos.
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tomoleary · 8 months
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Gene Colan - Daredevil #67 Unpublished Cover Original Art (Marvel, 1970)
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Similar layout but the published art is by Marie Severin and Bill Everett and holds an E7V brand.
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bostworld · 1 month
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smashedpages · 3 months
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Today in 1964, Daredevil #1 by Stan Lee and Bill Everett hit stands, announcing the arrival of Matt Murdock and his super-hero identity, Daredevil aka the Man Without Fear! We also met his friends Karen Page and Foggy Nelson.
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chernobog13 · 4 months
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Namor the Sub-Mariner by his creator, Bill Everett.
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browsethestacks · 6 months
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Outlaw Kid #02 (1970)
Art by Herb Trimpe And Bill Everett
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balu8 · 2 months
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Bill Everett
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616mattfoggymoments · 6 months
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Daredevil (1964) #1 | Stan Lee & Bill Everett
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gameraboy2 · 1 year
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Spellbound #14 (1953) Cover by Bill Everett
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weirdlookindog · 22 days
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Spellbound #19 - Atlas, February 1954.
Cover art by Bill Everett.
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zonaperdida · 6 months
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Stan Lee & Bill Everett, Menace #5 "Zombie!", 1953.
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atomic-chronoscaph · 1 year
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Daredevil - art by Jack Kirby and Bill Everett (1964)
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Sunday Sub-Mariner World
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Namora
by Tomm Coker
From Agents of Atlas (2006) #4
Unlike the other two heroes of the Timely Trinity, Namor never had a male sidekick. Then late in the Marvel Mystery Comics run, Bill Everett and Ken Bald created Namora, a hybrid cousin, who was close in age to Namor. She wasn't really a sidekick, so much as a derivative of Namor, much like Supergirl and Batgirl. She even got her own comic, though it only lasted a few issues.
Everett brought her back with Namor in the 1950s Atlas run, but when Stan Lee brought Namor into the Silver Age, he left behind Namora. A decade later, when Everett was once again doing a Namor book, he explained Namora's absence by having her killed off by the ever jealous Llyra in Lemuria, and introduced her daughter, Namorita.
And so for most of Namor's existence in the Marvel Universe, Namora was dead ... until Jeff Parker brought her back for his awesome Agents of Atlas run in 2006. While mostly appearing with that retro team, she has drifted in and out of Namor's world since then.
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pat1dee · 1 year
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“Many Faces Of The Hulk”
FOOM #2
June 1973
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