[a / b / c / d / e / f / g / gif / h / hr / k / m / o / p / r / s / t / u / v / vg / vm / vmg / vr / vrpg / vst / w / wg] [i / ic] [r9k / s4s / vip] [cm / hm / lgbt / y] [3 / aco / adv / an / bant / biz / cgl / ck / co / diy / fa / fit / gd / hc / his / int / jp / lit / mlp / mu / n / news / out / po / pol / pw / qst / sci / soc / sp / tg / toy / trv / tv / vp / vt / wsg / wsr / x / xs] [Settings] [Search] [Mobile] [Home]
Board
Settings Mobile Home
/co/ - Comics & Cartoons

Name
Spoiler?[]
Options
Comment
Verification
4chan Pass users can bypass this verification. [Learn More] [Login]
File[]
  • Please read the Rules and FAQ before posting.

08/21/20New boards added: /vrpg/, /vmg/, /vst/ and /vm/
05/04/17New trial board added: /bant/ - International/Random
10/04/16New board for 4chan Pass users: /vip/ - Very Important Posts
[Hide] [Show All]


[Advertise on 4chan]


File: Sal B.jpg (216 KB, 532x412)
216 KB
216 KB JPG
He was always one of those journeyman artists that just did good work. Peace to him and his own.
>>
>>152275243
sticky?
>>
>>152275243
Wow. I thought he was already gone.
RIP
>>
Rest in peace to a legend
>>
>>152275243
RIP King
>>
>>152275243
RIP
>>
File: spectacular 200.jpg (263 KB, 966x1512)
263 KB
263 KB JPG
Goddamn. RIP to the legend.
sticky
>>
>>152275313
There better fucking be. He was one of the greats and it feels like he only started getting his due later in life because he wasn't some flashy auteur artist.
>>
>>152275243
RIP
>>
File: 1760164053164654.jpg (105 KB, 567x750)
105 KB
105 KB JPG
Rest in peace.
>>
>>152275313
>>152275387
I'm gonna be frank
The only comic creators I can see whose death would cause a sticky to reach bump limit (past a thousand replies AND warrant the chunk method on the archive) are Alan Moore, Rob Liefeld, and Ken Penders.
Not Simonson
Not Miller
Not Millar
Not Ennis
Not Ellis
Not Bendis
Not McFarlane
Not Busiek
Not Kirkman
Not Mignola
Not Morrison
Not Baron
Not Van Sciver
Not Simone
Not Waid
Not Johns
Not Lee
Not Snyder
But those three simply because they're the ones who the secondaries, casuals, and outside observers (who outnumber us) know about the most through second hand discussion and memes
Maybe Neil Gaiman as well, maybe simply because he made Coraline and the big scandal involving him
>>
>>152275443
My money's on Miller, Morrison and Lee
>>
>>152275443
You're a retard if you don't think Jim fucking Lee or Alex Ross makes the cut
>>
File: spidey sal.jpg (58 KB, 500x687)
58 KB
58 KB JPG
>>
>>152275570
I'm sorry Anon, how many people showed up for George Perez's sticky?
>>
If nobody else is willing to do it, I can storytime a few issues he's done for this thread
Any suggestions?
>>
>>152275243
This not being a sticky means that /co/ is definitively the worst board. A legitimate talent from a dynasty is gone but all we do is bitch about the crumbling remnants that came far after him.

This man wasn’t perfect as an artist, but he captured rage and despair perfectly. His runs on Hulk and Spider-man are the envy of any artist who believes they can draw the embodiment of hurt and anger simply within the confides of a few panels. I’m hurt by this loss and believe we are all lesser for it
>>
>>152275628
I recently read some of his Avengers books. They were good. I think people might enjoy them.
>>
File: spidey beast.jpg (405 KB, 912x1410)
405 KB
405 KB JPG
>>152275634
I think his colorist on Spectacular did him dirty. I remember it being my least liked of the Spidey books at the time but then I read his other stuff and realized, yep. Someone done fucked up his pages.
>>
>>152275628
Do one of his Savage Sword of Conan issues.
>>
>>152275574
Alex Ross has enough stand alone art to fill up a thread. But you’re right it was a crime that George Perez’s sticky didn’t hit 1k
>>
>>152275243
You were my perfect friend, right there until the end, I'm forever missing you until we meet again.
>>
>>152275634
/co/'s......weird when it comes to comics
This place can know its shit and on average aren't Wizard Magazine level plebians but it fails to muster strong discussion on anything that doesn't already have a strong dedicated online fandom to begin with (i.e. why Sonic threads are some of the healthiest of the bunch)
This place is into capeshit but aren't encyclopedic about it past a few dedicated Anons
This place can be into non-cape but they're practically cryptids aside from evergreen comics like Scott Pilgrim or whenever the annual Usagi Yojimbo storytime hits
It's especially jarring when you look at places like fucking twitter of all places and those guys (while still smaller than most other fandoms and are very VERY toxic for their own reasons ) are able to actually be passionate over monthly comics and actively do read decades old comics
12 for 12 is a thing over there and on LOCG (it started there) but we can never do a thread like that here
>>
>>152275717
I don't think Keith Giffen's did so hot either.

>>152275729
the board used to be a lot more comic focused than it was cartoon focused. At some point that changed. Comic fans in general also seem to generally post slower. A cartoon thread will repeat itself a thousand times and fill a thread instantly so comic threads have a hard time staying afloat. I wish we were separate boards.
>>
File: 195984987.jpg (214 KB, 603x688)
214 KB
214 KB JPG
>>
>>152275771
Yeah this was right close to his birthday.
>>
>>152275757
>I wish we were separate boards.
Eh....I know the grass is always greener but I'm gonna be honest
Board split wouldn't be as ideal as you'd think
The cartoon side would go on normally at first until they realize they can no longer make threads on artist OCs, mascots, picture books, etc (if the rules are taken seriously over what counts for a cartoon i.e. animation) while the comic side erupts into a war between non-cape vs cape because the latter would still try making threads on adaptations or anything remotely superhero related
>>
>>152275757
Keith didn’t but honestly his posthumous tweet tops anything /co/ could’ve said or story timed about him
>>
>>152275757
>>152275729
The unfortunate ate reality is is that comics, like pretty much all current pop culture, are so far into the gutter that people don’t want to talk without getting mad. You’d think that getting sad would do it as well but I guess not…
>>
File: GHXUhLcbcAA1HTK.jpg (374 KB, 1356x2048)
374 KB
374 KB JPG
RIP. I really liked how he drew Spidey.
>>
Oh no, was just thinking of him a few days ago. Must be the last surviving person from this era? Rip. Sticky now jannies.
>>
>>152275696
You got it
>>
>>
>>
>>152275243
oh, wtf? >>152275341, RIP to a real one
>>
Started ROM and he really is good at it. It feels mean and belittling to say he's a great journeyman artist when I do mean it as the highest compliment. He was a fill in artist you were happy to see which again sounds bad but is meant as the highest praise

>>152275903

Roy Thomas' still kicking, not sure who else
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>152275243
I didn’t realize that he was John’s brother, I always assumed he was a son.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>152275243
Damn, RIP. I'd post a reaction image of Spider-man crying or something but I won't use up the image limit, a storytime of his work is far more fitting
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>152275886
Most people discuss comics in namespace and IRL with other people who already cleared their tolerance conditions, not much reason to seek it among the misanthropes of a dead anon board
>>
>>152275243
F. He was a great artist.
>>
The Solstar Order weeps...
>>
>>152275989
wonder when thomas goes. He was pretty young when he started, so it might be a while
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
Alright, gonna for a quick walk
If the thread is still up I'll go ahead and do an issue from his work on ROM
Suggest me anything else (please be specific right down to the issue)
>>
The Elf with a Gun claims another victim.
>>
>>152275989
>Rom
It really suffers after he leaves.
I read a lot of old Marvel and I always appreciate Sal whenever he shows up.
>>
>>152275903
For guys who made their name in the '60s there's still Roy Thomas and Jim Steranko. The next generation to bite it are going to be the ealy/mid-'70s guys like Starlin, Moench, Englehart and such.
>>
>>152275771
RIP
>>
>>152275989
Too many people are hung up on "wow factor" when it comes to comic artists. Sal wasn't a wow factor kind of guy, he was just a dependable artist who did the Marvel house style well and could tell a story. That's not impressive to most people though. They don't like the solid and dependable session musician, they want the flashy guitarist who can noodle out the most impressive solo.
>>
>>152276148
Honestly I always lose track of how old these people are. It makes me suddenly realize how old I am. Jim Lee being 61 and Rob Liefeld being close is very sobering.
>>
>>152275892
Yeah this certfied grade-a kino was my phone wallpaper for a while. I'm putting it up again.
>>152276278
Does anybody know Hulk? Sorry I'm not a big fan who has read a bunch of it yet. But I do know Sal was a major artist for him. I know 300 is important but is it the best of his work on the book? Other than that issue, I guess 200 will be known by everyone but for those who don't know, that's a good one-shot if length is an issue. But I would say storytiming half or 2 issues of Child Within is good so anons who haven't read the run by JMD and Sal are intrigued but the story isn't ruined and it doesn't take up the whole thread.
Issues 178 and 179 to be precise. Or perhaps the story they did in Spectacular issue 189. That takes place in the middle of the arc while still being able to stand alone.
>>
>>152276763
>Issues 178 and 179 to be precise.
I'll do that and Rom after dinner
>>
>>152276591
Yeah. I get you. He's like Roger Stern in that way. They're not trying to reinvent everything and that sounds dismissive but I just mean he actually GETS whatever you put him on. He won't be drawing Sal Buscema's showcase spectacular staring Sal Buscema. He drew Spider-man in a way that doesn't break the illusion.
>>
File: Tears shed.jpg (33 KB, 483x356)
33 KB
33 KB JPG
>>152275243
RIP
>>
File: Hulk_Mantlo246_Grief.png (579 KB, 525x353)
579 KB
579 KB PNG
>>152275243
Oh fuck, Sal's work is amazing. Didn't realize he's the artist that kicked off Mantlo's Hulk run. He was not scared to draw insane machinery on Gamma Base and drawing up all the fun story tangents that'd pop up.
Mods sticky this
>>
I had trouble looking him up in the Grand Comics Database.
Zero hits.
Also zero for his brother, John.

Finally dawned on me that >>152275243 ,the OP, spelled his name wrong!!
It's BUSCEMA/. There's no "H".
>>
File: P00001.jpg (2.54 MB, 1986x3056)
2.54 MB
2.54 MB JPG
Alright, I'm back
>>
>>152277167
based, he is a top 5 spider-man artist ever, underrated because the big 4 ahead of him are incredible but he's a legend in his own right
>>
File: P00002.jpg (2.19 MB, 1988x3056)
2.19 MB
2.19 MB JPG
>>
File: P00003.jpg (1.57 MB, 1988x3056)
1.57 MB
1.57 MB JPG
>>
File: P00004.jpg (1.62 MB, 1988x3056)
1.62 MB
1.62 MB JPG
>>
File: P00005.jpg (1.55 MB, 1988x3056)
1.55 MB
1.55 MB JPG
>>
>>152275243
>typo
No wonder I missed the thread initially.

Here's a bit from an article:
https://comicbookclublive.com/2026/01/26/sal-buscema-comic-book-legend-dead-at-89/

>Sal Buscema, Comic Book Legend, Dead At 89

>Sal Buscema, a comic book legend known for his decade-long run on The Incredible Hulk, eight-year run on The Spectacular Spider-Man, and more, has reportedly passed away at age 89. Today would have been his 90th birthday.

>The news was first reported on Facebook by artist Sterling Clark, who previously worked on an issue of a book called National Guardians that also included inks from Buscema. Clark was told by Buscema’s wife Joan that the legend passed away last Friday (January 23) — just shy of his 90th birthday.

>Originally from Brooklyn, Buscema started in the comic book industry as an inker, working with his brother John Buscema on art at Dell Comics. Though he bumped around to different jobs over time, it wasn’t until 1968 that he came into his own.
>>
File: P00006.jpg (1.62 MB, 1988x3056)
1.62 MB
1.62 MB JPG
>>
File: P00007.jpg (1.38 MB, 1988x3056)
1.38 MB
1.38 MB JPG
>>
File: P00008.jpg (2.11 MB, 1988x3056)
2.11 MB
2.11 MB JPG
>>
STICKY NOW
ONE OF THE BEST TO EVER PUT HIS PENCIL TO THE PAPER
HIS GREEN GOBLIN IS ICONIC
PERIOD
FULL STOP
THANKS FOR YOU ATTENTION TO THIS MATTER
>>
File: P00009.jpg (1.06 MB, 1988x3056)
1.06 MB
1.06 MB JPG
>>
File: P00010.jpg (1.01 MB, 1988x3056)
1.01 MB
1.01 MB JPG
>>
File: P00011.jpg (1.67 MB, 1988x3056)
1.67 MB
1.67 MB JPG
>>
File: P00012.jpg (1.45 MB, 1988x3056)
1.45 MB
1.45 MB JPG
>>
File: P00013.jpg (1.5 MB, 1988x3056)
1.5 MB
1.5 MB JPG
>>
File: P00014.jpg (1.65 MB, 1988x3056)
1.65 MB
1.65 MB JPG
>>
File: P00015.jpg (2.14 MB, 1988x3056)
2.14 MB
2.14 MB JPG
>>
>>152275443
I think Millar is becoming politically contentious enough for his stick to devolve into a shitshow like the Dilbert one.
Kirkman is very popular with casuals.
>>
>>152277326
That MJ, holy shit
>>
File: P00016.jpg (1.48 MB, 1988x3056)
1.48 MB
1.48 MB JPG
>>
File: P00017.jpg (1.13 MB, 1988x3056)
1.13 MB
1.13 MB JPG
>>
File: P00018.jpg (1.98 MB, 1988x3056)
1.98 MB
1.98 MB JPG
>>
File: P00019.jpg (1.54 MB, 1988x3056)
1.54 MB
1.54 MB JPG
>>
File: P00020.jpg (2.28 MB, 1988x3056)
2.28 MB
2.28 MB JPG
>>
File: P00021.jpg (2.11 MB, 1988x3056)
2.11 MB
2.11 MB JPG
>>
File: P00022.jpg (1.34 MB, 1988x3056)
1.34 MB
1.34 MB JPG
>>
File: P00023.jpg (1.3 MB, 1988x3056)
1.3 MB
1.3 MB JPG
>>
>>152277408
>>152277416
>>152277429
>>152277443
>>152277456
Feels like nu-comics don't have this many pages little to no dialogue anymore.
And like others said, the art isn't mindblowing but it's very competently drawn and easy to read.
>>
File: P00001.jpg (3.25 MB, 1989x3056)
3.25 MB
3.25 MB JPG
>>
File: P00002.jpg (3.45 MB, 1988x3056)
3.45 MB
3.45 MB JPG
>>152277481
>>
File: P00003.jpg (2.79 MB, 1988x3056)
2.79 MB
2.79 MB JPG
Didn't mean to reply just now
>>
File: P00004.jpg (2.51 MB, 1988x3056)
2.51 MB
2.51 MB JPG
>>
>>152275243
Sorry to hear, I hope his passing was in peace.
>>
File: P00005.jpg (2.68 MB, 1988x3056)
2.68 MB
2.68 MB JPG
>>
File: P00006.jpg (2.39 MB, 1988x3056)
2.39 MB
2.39 MB JPG
>>
>>152277481
Gotta dig but they're there, anon. I remember when people found it hard to go back because of how wordy things got! This era was a nice middle ground. It's easy to get cynical looking at the big picture but there are some lovely runs out there if you seek them.
Enough about that though, I am loving Buscema's art here. The pacing, the way he handles motion while keeping that wet feeling during the rain. The last couple of pages make me feel like raindrops are bouncing off my back.
>>
File: P00007.jpg (2.59 MB, 1988x3056)
2.59 MB
2.59 MB JPG
>>
File: P00008.jpg (2.68 MB, 1988x3056)
2.68 MB
2.68 MB JPG
>>
File: P00009.jpg (3.28 MB, 1988x3056)
3.28 MB
3.28 MB JPG
>>
File: P00010.jpg (3.04 MB, 1988x3056)
3.04 MB
3.04 MB JPG
>>
>>152277481
>Feels like nu-comics don't have this many pages little to no dialogue anymore.

Modern comics have a bad problem of decompression. Older comics wanted to give you your money's worth more. In an old comic even a multi part chapter would feel complete in some fashion. New books will take half the book to get the team together and then spend it on breakfast.

>And like others said, the art isn't mindblowing but it's very competently drawn and easy to read.
I think what often gets over looked is that there's a very big difference between DRAWING and CARTOONING. It takes more than being able to draw well to draw a comic, if you get me. It's about flow, it's about story telling with sequential images. Look at this page from Spectacular 200.
>>152275386
Look at how much information and pathos is in that one page. THAT'S good comic book art. Any artist can make a single image look good. A good story teller is rare.
>>
File: P00011.jpg (3.27 MB, 1988x3056)
3.27 MB
3.27 MB JPG
>>
File: P00012.jpg (2.38 MB, 1988x3056)
2.38 MB
2.38 MB JPG
>>
File: P00013.jpg (3.08 MB, 1988x3056)
3.08 MB
3.08 MB JPG
>>
File: P00014.jpg (2.71 MB, 1988x3056)
2.71 MB
2.71 MB JPG
>>
File: P00015.jpg (3.47 MB, 1988x3056)
3.47 MB
3.47 MB JPG
>>
File: P00016.jpg (2.59 MB, 1988x3056)
2.59 MB
2.59 MB JPG
>>
>>152277678
That's good paneling
>>
>>152275243
F
>>
File: P00017.jpg (2.53 MB, 1988x3056)
2.53 MB
2.53 MB JPG
>>
File: P00018.jpg (2.71 MB, 1988x3056)
2.71 MB
2.71 MB JPG
>>
File: P00019.jpg (2.95 MB, 1988x3056)
2.95 MB
2.95 MB JPG
>>
File: P00020.jpg (3.26 MB, 1988x3056)
3.26 MB
3.26 MB JPG
>>
File: P00021.jpg (3.09 MB, 1988x3056)
3.09 MB
3.09 MB JPG
>>
File: P00022.jpg (2.67 MB, 1988x3056)
2.67 MB
2.67 MB JPG
>>
File: P00023.jpg (2.51 MB, 1988x3056)
2.51 MB
2.51 MB JPG
>>
File: P00024.jpg (2.56 MB, 1988x3056)
2.56 MB
2.56 MB JPG
>>
File: P00001.jpg (1.91 MB, 1992x3056)
1.91 MB
1.91 MB JPG
Alright, now for Rom
>>
File: P00002.jpg (2.38 MB, 1988x3056)
2.38 MB
2.38 MB JPG
>>
File: Defenders 025-011.jpg (760 KB, 1795x987)
760 KB
760 KB JPG
>>152276289
How did Sal Buscema die before Roy Thomas when we all saw Roy get shot by the Elf?
>>
>>152277779
>>152277302
>>152277311
Norman's appearances here really do paint a stark contrast between this and earlier "mindscape" and "floating heads" psychological torment that impacted Peter and Norman. Here with Harry, Norman just being his father standing over him or near him feels more real and better for this story.
It's that constant looming and shadowing that you feel when you think about your predecessors and dead relatives. That feeling that they are watching and judging. JMD and Buscema's restraint and economical pacing of each panel while providing repeating panels only a couple of times and used for the reader to feel the time passing is justified. I struggle to find other examples as clear as the ones already posted.
>>
File: P00003.jpg (2.69 MB, 1988x3056)
2.69 MB
2.69 MB JPG
>>
File: P00004.jpg (2.4 MB, 1988x3056)
2.4 MB
2.4 MB JPG
>>
File: P00005.jpg (2.45 MB, 1988x3056)
2.45 MB
2.45 MB JPG
>>
File: P00006.jpg (2.77 MB, 1988x3056)
2.77 MB
2.77 MB JPG
>>
File: P00007.jpg (2.68 MB, 1988x3056)
2.68 MB
2.68 MB JPG
>>
File: P00008.jpg (2.34 MB, 1988x3056)
2.34 MB
2.34 MB JPG
>>
>>152277844
Did Sal ever talk much about what John thought of his art/career and the changing industry/times?
>>
File: P00009.jpg (2.36 MB, 1988x3056)
2.36 MB
2.36 MB JPG
>>
Sticky this thread you faggy jannies
>>
>>152275243
RIP
>>
File: P00010.jpg (2.92 MB, 1988x3056)
2.92 MB
2.92 MB JPG
>>
File: rom nausea.jpg (118 KB, 456x440)
118 KB
118 KB JPG
>>152275243
RIP Sal, ROM is genuinely one of my favorite comics thanks to his art and Mantlo's dialogue.
>>
File: P00011.jpg (2.69 MB, 1988x3056)
2.69 MB
2.69 MB JPG
>>
File: P00012.jpg (2.24 MB, 1988x3056)
2.24 MB
2.24 MB JPG
>>
I knew it had to happen at some point but this still stings. He was THE Spider-Man artist for much of my early collecting days.
My first ever Marvel comics was Spectacular Spider-Man vol.1 #179
I am beyond bummed out that he's gone.
>>
File: P00013.jpg (2.44 MB, 1988x3056)
2.44 MB
2.44 MB JPG
>>
File: P00014.jpg (2.23 MB, 1988x3056)
2.23 MB
2.23 MB JPG
>>
File: P00015.jpg (2.55 MB, 1988x3056)
2.55 MB
2.55 MB JPG
>>
File: P00016.jpg (2.49 MB, 1988x3056)
2.49 MB
2.49 MB JPG
>>
File: P00017.jpg (3.14 MB, 1988x3056)
3.14 MB
3.14 MB JPG
>>
File: P00018.jpg (2.33 MB, 1988x3056)
2.33 MB
2.33 MB JPG
>>
File: P00019.jpg (2.56 MB, 1988x3056)
2.56 MB
2.56 MB JPG
>>
File: P00020.jpg (2.76 MB, 1988x3056)
2.76 MB
2.76 MB JPG
>>
File: P00021.jpg (2.56 MB, 1988x3056)
2.56 MB
2.56 MB JPG
>>
File: P00022.jpg (2.68 MB, 1988x3056)
2.68 MB
2.68 MB JPG
>>
File: P00023.jpg (2.22 MB, 1988x3056)
2.22 MB
2.22 MB JPG
>>
File: P00001.jpg (1.96 MB, 2019x3096)
1.96 MB
1.96 MB JPG
>>
File: P00002.jpg (2.36 MB, 1988x3056)
2.36 MB
2.36 MB JPG
>>
File: P00003.jpg (2.56 MB, 1988x3056)
2.56 MB
2.56 MB JPG
>>
File: P00004.jpg (3.15 MB, 1988x3056)
3.15 MB
3.15 MB JPG
>>
File: P00005.jpg (3.11 MB, 1988x3056)
3.11 MB
3.11 MB JPG
>>
File: P00006.jpg (3.02 MB, 1988x3056)
3.02 MB
3.02 MB JPG
>>
File: P00007.jpg (2.84 MB, 1988x3056)
2.84 MB
2.84 MB JPG
>>
>>152275243
RIP legend
>>
File: P00008.jpg (2.64 MB, 1988x3056)
2.64 MB
2.64 MB JPG
>>
File: P00009.jpg (2.97 MB, 1988x3056)
2.97 MB
2.97 MB JPG
>>
File: P00010.jpg (2.5 MB, 1988x3056)
2.5 MB
2.5 MB JPG
>>
File: P00011.jpg (2.55 MB, 1988x3056)
2.55 MB
2.55 MB JPG
>>
>>152275903
Thomas, Steranko and Conway are about all that's left big names wise from the Silver Age.
>>
File: P00012.jpg (2.86 MB, 1988x3056)
2.86 MB
2.86 MB JPG
>>
File: P00013.jpg (2.39 MB, 1988x3056)
2.39 MB
2.39 MB JPG
>>
File: P00014.jpg (2.67 MB, 1988x3056)
2.67 MB
2.67 MB JPG
>>
File: P00015.jpg (2.59 MB, 1988x3056)
2.59 MB
2.59 MB JPG
>>
File: P00016.jpg (2.69 MB, 1988x3056)
2.69 MB
2.69 MB JPG
>>
File: P00017.jpg (2.34 MB, 1988x3056)
2.34 MB
2.34 MB JPG
>>
File: P00018.jpg (2.94 MB, 1988x3056)
2.94 MB
2.94 MB JPG
>>
File: P00019.jpg (2.33 MB, 1988x3056)
2.33 MB
2.33 MB JPG
>>
File: P00020.jpg (2.84 MB, 1988x3056)
2.84 MB
2.84 MB JPG
>>
File: P00021.jpg (2.59 MB, 1988x3056)
2.59 MB
2.59 MB JPG
>>
File: P00022.jpg (2.26 MB, 1988x3056)
2.26 MB
2.26 MB JPG
>>
File: P00023.jpg (2.25 MB, 1988x3056)
2.25 MB
2.25 MB JPG
>>
>>152277915
I don't think either has said much of anything.
>>
>>152275243
rip
>>
>>152277965
After the story time, I went off to read the rest of the arc and it made me remember what I love about comics and even cried a bit. Gonna drink for Buscema today, the world lost a real one
>>
>>152278628
Here's to you, anon.
>>
File: steranko vs bob kane.jpg (164 KB, 500x1769)
164 KB
164 KB JPG
>>152276531
>Jim Steranko

Steranko is too bitchin' cool 3d to die.
>>
>>152275386
Old Spider-Man was so fucking depressing. The other issue that always got to me was the one with the dying boy, that got adapted to the 90s cartoon.

>>152275443
>Ken Penders over
>Miller
>Millar
>Ennis
>McFarlane
>Kirkman
>Mignola
>Simone
>Johns
Are you crazy? Even this shithole isn't that far-gone (yet).

>>152278090
Kino classic X-Men panel.
>>
>>152278717
Anon....which piece of licenseshit almost always has a thread up 24/7?
Penders dying would invite /v/ Anons who otherwise couldn't talk about it on their board so they'd hop to a sticky on /co/
The man is notable enough for Sonic fans to be invested in even if they never read the comics
They outnumber us
>>
>>152277358
Oh yeah Scott Adams got more replies than most comic creators
I guess Doug TenNapel will as well though he'd probably get a sticky on /v/ as well
>>
File: bittle.png (106 KB, 518x397)
106 KB
106 KB PNG
>>152278756
You win, thanks for depressing me.
>>
>>152275243
F
>>
>>152278808
Comic fans are a dying breed, anon. Sonic, on the other hand, is an ever-perpetuating vortex of autism that will outlive the heat death of the universe. Do not allow yourself to be depressed by its perpetuity— instead, mourn the circumstances which brought us here.
>>
I mean, let's be honest. He may have been a cool dude but this art isn't that good. He ain't no Miura
>>
My life is just a poor attempt
To imitate the man
I'm just a living legacy
To the leader of the band
>>
RIP "Our Pal" Sal. I liked his work on Hulk and ROM when I was dipping my toes into Bronze Age Marvel, although my introduction to his work was his brief run on New Mutants between McLeod and Sienkiewicz, which wasn't his best work, hah. He was a very consistent visual storyteller who knew how to do character personality no matter which book he got put on, which is more than you could say for many artists then and especially now.
>>
>>152275443
Bendis dying would start a party that'd last at least a whole fucking week. Who do you think you're kidding?
There'd be at least 200 posts just saying "Brian Michael Bendis? The comic book writer? Him? He's dead? Expired? Bendis? He's shuffled off the mortal coil?"
>>
>>152279367
I don't wish death on anyone. Especially over a hobbyist medium. But it sure does stand out that it's always the good ones and the people who suck seem to be goddamn immortal.
>>
File: I don't have any ideas.png (2.95 MB, 1019x2315)
2.95 MB
2.95 MB PNG
Always had a soft spot for Sal, RIP
>>
perfectly iconic art. rip.
>>
Why no Sticky?
>>
File: IMG_2643.jpg (801 KB, 1440x1802)
801 KB
801 KB JPG
>>152275243
F
>>
>>152275443
>Rob Liefeld
When you include someone this “young“ as him, you need to include Jim Lee, Frank Cho and Goeff Johns. They would get a thread to bump limit.
>>
I loved his Thor
>>
File: best JoH.jpg (794 KB, 974x1500)
794 KB
794 KB JPG
any iconic iron man work?
>>
F
>>
>>152278717
>Old Spider-Man was so fucking depressing. The other issue that always got to me was the one with the dying boy, that got adapted to the 90s cartoon.
That's part of why it got so popular, and Sal being able to capture dramatic/depressing moments without even a hint of ridiculousness is why he was one of the greats.
>>
>>152275443
No
as recent events have shown, to get a 1000+ sticky, you just have to be controversial and be a lightning rod for discussion and trolling. There is no other criteria.

>Not Miller
Oh you better believe we're having a 1000+ post sticky for Miller.
>>
>>152277481
>Feels like nu-comics don't have this many pages little to no dialogue anymore.
Drawing takes time, even in the age of AI slop they're going to focus on Dialogue because the point of nu-comics is to sell other nu-comics. Today, in a post-Bendis world, those blank pages would have multiple plugs for 5 other crossover comics and be stuffed full of 'relatable' humor.
>>
>>152277613
>Modern comics have a bad problem of decompression.
Right, this too. Sure this is Spiderman's fight, but what is Nova doing right now? How about Captain America's cat? What is this strange reference to the 60's cartoon? We need at least half of the story dedicated to wrapping up plot points we left dangling in this other issue.
>>
>>152278224
Marv Wolfman is still around and he began at DC in the late 60s. Same with Mike Friedrich.
>>
Where's the sticky, you bastards?

>>152278756
You're confused, we don't care about Sonic comics (and /sthg/ posters which come from here do talk about those shitty comics on /v/ against our will anyway).
>>
File: Modern comics.jpg (2.74 MB, 5048x1552)
2.74 MB
2.74 MB JPG
>>152277481
>>
>>152275243
RIP
I'll have to pick up at least a few of his books next time I'm at the comic book store

>>152275729
I do like that at least a few knowers spend time in storytimes to fill myself, and others, in on things
>>
File: hulk buscema.jpg (133 KB, 736x690)
133 KB
133 KB JPG
>>152275243
holly molly, he is the ESSENTIAL HULK AUTHOR
he is the man who definse HULK


STICKY PLEASE
>>
File: sal buscema (1).jpg (128 KB, 457x703)
128 KB
128 KB JPG
>he had a ten-year run as artist of The Incredible Hulk and an eight-year run as artist of The Spectacular Spider-Man. He was the younger brother of comics artist John Buscema.
>>
File: sal buscema (1).png (861 KB, 598x894)
861 KB
861 KB PNG
>As a youth, Buscema was a fan of Hal Foster's Prince Valiant comic strip,[6] of George Tuska's comic book art,[7] and of commercial illustrators such has Robert Fawcett and Norman Rockwell.[8] He acknowledged that his artist brother John was "greatly responsible for me pursuing drawing. ... John was definitely an inspiration".

>John and Sal attended the High School of Music & Art; Sal graduated in 1955
>>
File: sal buscema (2).jpg (167 KB, 900x1367)
167 KB
167 KB JPG
>Early years
Sal began working in the comic book industry as an inker in the early 1950s when his brother agreed to let him ink comics pages; this led to Sal helping John by doing occasional background art on Dell Comics series John was drawing.[10]

>After high school, Buscema found work at "a small, two-man advertising art studio in Manhattan" but was fired after three months of doing mostly production work. He went on to a larger commercial-art studio, where he was a gofer and a delivery person. He quit, then spent less than a year filling wedding-ring orders for the jewelry manufacturer J.R. Wood and Sons before being drafted into the peacetime U. S. Army in 1956. Classified as an "illustrator", he served with the Army Corps of Engineers stationed at Fort Belvoir in Virginia.[11] He spent 21 months doing film strips and charts as training aids before being discharged. He attained the rank of specialist 3rd class, which he called "equivalent to corporal."

>Sal briefly returned to New York City to assist at a one-man art studio, but through a friend from the army, he secured a position at Creative Arts Studio in Washington, D.C. where he did illustrations for government agencies, including the Department of Agriculture and the Department of Defense. After living with his godparents for three months, Buscema and an Army buddy became roommates in Alexandria, Virginia.[13]

>In 1961, a call from his brother John brought Buscema to New York City to work with him at the advertising agency Alexander Chaite, Inc. After a year and a half, John returned to the comic book industry. Sal joined Mel Emde, a friend and colleague from Creative Arts Studio, who was opening his own company, Design Studio. Sal worked there until 1968.
>>
File: sal buscema (3).jpg (247 KB, 600x882)
247 KB
247 KB JPG
>In 1968, Sal began working for Marvel Comics, where John was already established as a freelance artist.[14] Sal had spent "every night for about a year" teaching himself "how to produce a dynamic page" in the Marvel Comics storytelling style, enduring harsh critiques from John. Sal recalled in the late 2000s:


>Once I got the hang of it I made up ... six sample pages of pencils [i.e. penciled, uninked art pages], which I regret, because I wanted to be an inker. I didn't want to pencil. My first few jobs for Marvel were inking jobs, but I did those while working for Design Center. I wanted to work full-time for Marvel, so it was out of necessity that I penciled. [Editor-in-chief Stan Lee] loved [the samples]. He asked me to come on up to New York, which I did, and I went through the most fantastic interview of my life. Stan was leaping on his chair and his desk, just to relate to me physically what he wanted on a comic-book page. It was fascinating and it was charming all at the same time. He made the sound effects, the whole nine yards. ... He demonstrated every other way you could possibly demonstrate what he wanted on those pages—the dynamics and so on.
>>
File: sal buscema.jpg (84 KB, 523x450)
84 KB
84 KB JPG
>The interview had come about after Buscema, at his brother's urging, had first written to Marvel production manager Sol Brodsky to introduce himself and his work. Brodsky had no assignments for him at the time, and Buscema "called him a couple of times just to bug him a little bit and let him know that I was still alive, and eventually the first job came through" in June 1968[16] — the 10-page Western feature "Gunhawk". "I think they just said, 'Sal, here's the plot, go to it,'" Buscema recalled in 2003.[7] That story, "The Coming of Gunhawk", by writer Jerry Siegel and penciler Werner Roth, was published in the omnibus title Western Gunfighters #1 (cover-dated Aug. 1970). Sal's first published comics work had come before that: inking John Buscema's pencil art on four 39- to 40-page stories in the superhero comic The Silver Surfer #4–7 (Feb.–Aug. 1969); and inking Larry Lieber's pencils on the regular-sized, 20-page Western The Rawhide Kid #68 (Feb. 1969)
>>
File: 1402251955786.jpg (111 KB, 722x360)
111 KB
111 KB JPG
>John Buscema specifically asked for his brother as inker on The Silver Surfer, at the time a high-profile project dear to writer-editor Lee, who gave the character an unprecedented for the time double-sized, 64-page (with ads and covers) solo series priced at 25 cents, more than twice the price of the standard 32-page, 12-cent comic. Sal Buscema recalled,

Joe Sinnott inked the first three Silver Surfer [issues]. John was not happy with the inking Joe was doing ... because Joe's style of inking was somewhat overpowering, and at the end it ... didn't look like John Buscema anymore.... John told [Stan], 'I don't want Joe inking my work. He's losing my penciling.' ... He said, 'I want my brother' ...[H]e knew that I knew how to ink his work. He was a little spotty on my first issue, but after that he was absolutely delighted with what I did.

>Within a year, Buscema was penciling the superhero-team comic The Avengers, and for the next thirty years, he was one of the most prolific artists at the company. He recalled in the late 2000s, "At first I was very slow. If I knocked out six or eight pages a week I was happy. Then I started getting a little bit better, and I could probably do a couple of pages a day. But once I hit that five-year transitional period, I was like a machine. I could grind the stuff out. ... Everything just fell into place, and all of a sudden I found it very easy to do
>>
Still no sticky for a legend.
RIP
>>
File: 1710202616294.jpg (322 KB, 488x747)
322 KB
322 KB JPG
>Sal and writer Roy Thomas introduced the Squadron Sinister in The Avengers #69 (Oct. 1969) as a homage to the Justice League.[20][21] The Thomas/Buscema team produced the last new story in The Uncanny X-Men before that series became all-reprints for several years,[22] and created the super-villain Llyra in Sub-Mariner #32 (Dec. 1970).[23] Buscema drew an Avengers story plotted by science fiction writer Harlan Ellison, which featured the debut of Psyklop.[24] Writer Steve Englehart and Buscema launched Defenders as an ongoing series in August 1972[25][26] and introduced Valkyrie to the team in issue #4 (Feb. 1973).[27] Buscema also worked with Englehart on Captain America; their 1972–1975 run on that title saw it become one of Marvel's top-sellers.[28] The pair teamed on several issues of The Avengers as well[17] and Englehart has described Buscema as being one of his "all-time favorites" and "a perfect comic book storyteller."[29] With writer Steve Gerber, Buscema co-created Starhawk, adding the character to the roster of the future-based super-team, the Guardians of the Galaxy.[30][a] In 2010, Comics Bulletin ranked Buscema's collaboration with Gerber on The Defenders first on its list of the Top 10 1970s Marvels.
>>
File: 1717565381315.jpg (90 KB, 650x813)
90 KB
90 KB JPG
>With writer Bill Mantlo, Buscema created the supporting character Jean DeWolff in Marvel Team-Up #48 (Aug. 1976).[32] Mantlo, a frequent collaborator, later said that Buscema was a formative influence on his plotting.[33] Buscema was the original artist on The Spectacular Spider-Man, which debuted in December 1976.[34] He and Jim Shooter created Graviton in The Avengers #158 (April 1977).[35] The Rom series was launched by Mantlo and Buscema in December 1979.[36] The Mantlo/Buscema collaboration on The Incredible Hulk included the creation of the U-Foes[37] and the Soviet Super-Soldiers.[38] Buscema had a 10-year run on that Hulk series,[39] which he described as "[p]robably one of the most enjoyable experiences of my career. The fact that the Hulk was my all-time favorite character might be a contributing factor. I never tired of the character. Every story was a new challenge."[40] He became the artist on New Mutants, beginning with issue #4 (June 1983).[41] Beginning in the late 1970s, Buscema generally inked his own work.[42] In 1986, he began drawing Thor, working with writer Walt Simonson.[17] In the late 1980s, he returned to inking others' work, again including that of his brother John Buscema on an Englehart-scripted run on Fantastic Four.
>>
File: 1717565444295.jpg (112 KB, 1080x1080)
112 KB
112 KB JPG
>From 1988 through 1996, he penciled and mostly inked a 100-issue run on The Spectacular Spider-Man.[17] This included such story arcs as the "Lobo Brothers Gang War" with Gerry Conway[43] and "The Child Within", written by J. M. DeMatteis, featuring the death of Harry Osborn in #200 (May 1993).[44] In a 2002 interview, DeMatteis said, "I really loved the two years on Spectacular Spider-Man that I wrote with Sal Buscema drawing. Talk about underrated! Sal is one of the best storytellers and a wonderful collaborator. I loved that run."[45]
>Buscema then returned to Marvel, inking Pat Olliffe on Spider-Girl 1999, the summer annual of that series, and did work for both companies briefly before becoming the regular inker on The Incredible Hulk vol. 3, #11–20 (Feb.–Nov. 2000) and inking a smattering of other titles.[17] In 2003, he described himself as "retired for three years ... and I'm still inking jobs for Marvel!"[7] That same year he returned to comics full-time, inking Oliffe on Spider-Girl #55 (March 2003) and then launching into a long stint inking or doing finished art over pencil layouts by Ron Frenz from issues #59–100 (June 2003 – Sept. 2006). He continued to ink the series when it was relaunched as The Amazing Spider-Girl #1–30 (Dec. 2006 – May 2009). He inked Spider-Girl stories over Frenz's pencils in the omnibus title Web of Spider-Man vol. 2, #1–7 (Dec. 2009 – June 2010) and in the four-issue miniseries The Spectacular Spider-Girl vol. 2 (July–Oct. 2010) and the one-shot Spider-Girl: The End! #1 (Oct. 2010). In 2011, he was the inker, over Frenz, on the five-issue superhero miniseries Thunderstrike vol. 2
>>
File: 1737451090165.png (1.09 MB, 1045x587)
1.09 MB
1.09 MB PNG
>>From 1997 to 1999, Buscema worked for rival DC Comics, including penciling Batman, Superman, and Superboy stories, and inking the Creeper, Wonder Woman, and other characters' stories.[17] He recalled, "[T]he short time I worked for DC, they were giving me all these young guys that could hardly hold a pencil in their hands, and asking me to 'tweak it.' In cases like that I would definitely put a lot of myself into it and change whatever I felt needed to be changed
>>
File: 1739580483998.jpg (3.29 MB, 2100x3000)
3.29 MB
3.29 MB JPG
>In February 1959, Buscema started dating Joan, a secretary at Creative Arts Studio in Washington, D.C., where he worked. They married in May 1960. Their first son, Joe, was born in 1968, followed by Tony and Mike.[50]

>Buscema acted in community theatre. He was recognized in 1987 with BRAPA (Blue Ridge Alliance of Performing Arts) for his portrayal of Tevye in Fiddler on the Roof in which he appeared at the Little Theatre of Alexandria, Virginia in 1998.[51]

>Buscema died on January 23, 2026, at age 89; it was announced on January 26, on what would have been his 90th birthday
>>
File: 1586733803949.jpg (564 KB, 991x1510)
564 KB
564 KB JPG
>Characters Created by Sal Buscema
Aleta Ogord
Aquarius
Brain Child
Bulldozer
Cancer
Capricorn
Commander Kraken
Constrictor
Count Otto Vermis
Crime Master
Cybele
Demogoblin
Wraith
Diamondhead
Firebird
Fredrick Foswell
Gemini
Grand Director
Graviton
Hecate
Hitman
Inferno (Joseph Conroy)
IronClad
Isis
Jude the Entropic Man
Khoryphos
Leo
Lightmaster
Lobo Brothers
Nebulon
Nefarius
Piledriver
Pisces
Professor Phobos
Psyklop
Razorback
Rocket Raccoon
Rom
Sabra
Sagittarius
Selene
Seth
Slyde
Solarr
Sphinx
Starhawk
Taurus
Thunderball
Unseen
Ursa Major
Vapor
Vector
Viper
Virgo
Walking Stiletto
Warpath
Kate Waynesboro
Wraith
Wrecking Crew
X-Ray
Baron Zemo
Zodiac
>>
>>152281683
I love this issue
>>
File: sal buscema x-men.jpg (240 KB, 850x1342)
240 KB
240 KB JPG
>>152281754
I found it on /v/ checking on 4chan archives for Sal Buscema images, that Hela art is superkinto.
>>
s
>>
File: 1720147675072205.jpg (186 KB, 1700x1299)
186 KB
186 KB JPG
Is true that Sal Buscema was the first artist in giving Black Cat her "opened" chest costume?
I read that on /tv/, but it is true or not?
>>
>>152281646
Even the westaboos on 5ch are showing more activity for this news than this thread. This board is dead
>>
>>152282018
I saw that too. I'm so sick of this shit, we really need our own board. 90% of the cartoon threads are just pedofags posting cropped porn and nothing gets done, but their hyper activity always slides good comic threads off the catalogue.
>>
RIP Sal, I remember tracing his ROM pages when I was a kid learning to draw

He does deserve a sticky but it's not like /co matters anyway
>>
>>152275243
Mods are fucking faggots if they don’t sticky this. God damn I’m so sick of these transsexual cartoon watching vermin running this board.
>>
>>152281652
I loved his run on spider-girl but he got fucked by his inker hard on a lot of it
>>
DC Comics by Sal Buscema.
>>
Some Marvel Comics by Sal Buscema.
>>
>>152275243
HE CAN'T KEEP GETTING AWAY WITH THIS!
>>
File: salute.jpg (38 KB, 532x447)
38 KB
38 KB JPG
>>152281694
>Wrecking Crew
>Baron Zemo
>>
>>152275243
F
>>
>>152281642
Joe inked that Buscema art in the ROM issues and it looked decent. I think Sal was peeved at Joe softening the features and dialing back the horror comics expressions Sal favored.
>>
>>152275443
When Slott dies I'm throwing a block party.
>>
>>152281804
That was Mark Bagley
>>
Surely there's an interview or profile in Alter Ego or The Comics Journal or some kind of zine?
It'd be more interesting than just copying and pasting Wikipediaslop.
>>
>>152275243
F
>>
File: rip sal.jpg (116 KB, 500x767)
116 KB
116 KB JPG
>>152275243
>no sticky
Welp, RIP. Literally one of Marvel's most important artists
>>
File: sal buscema.jpg (79 KB, 400x607)
79 KB
79 KB JPG
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e3QPTKd8jcE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zI0JRYk7ERk
>>
File: Alter Ego_v2_015_030.jpg (361 KB, 1298x1668)
361 KB
361 KB JPG
>>
>My maximum carnage set will now never be signed fully :(
>>
File: Alter Ego_v2_015_031.jpg (544 KB, 1275x1650)
544 KB
544 KB JPG
>>
File: Alter Ego_v2_015_032.jpg (463 KB, 1288x1660)
463 KB
463 KB JPG
>>
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_r3WH3Zs0c
an interview from 2021
>>
File: Alter Ego_v2_015_033.jpg (452 KB, 1346x1705)
452 KB
452 KB JPG
>>
File: Alter Ego_v2_015_034.jpg (451 KB, 1291x1662)
451 KB
451 KB JPG
>>
File: Alter Ego_v2_015_035.jpg (577 KB, 1275x1650)
577 KB
577 KB JPG
>>
File: absolute sal buscema.jpg (3.53 MB, 2333x3111)
3.53 MB
3.53 MB JPG
>>
File: 1749723083873597.jpg (45 KB, 300x450)
45 KB
45 KB JPG
>>152284852
I forget just how many iconic Spidey covers he did over the years, but this one is probably my favorite.
>>
>>152285239
really good one, I have to look after more sal buscema cover in the next weeks.
>>
>>152284609
As far as I remember I prefer John but its been a while since I've really gone through their works
>>
>no sticky
MODS = FRAUDS
>>
>>152277613
The best part is IIRC the last few pages of Spectacular #200 were supposed to have diaogue and captions but when DeMatteis saw the pages he realized it would be more effective without them because the storytelling on them made the words unnecessary.
>>
>>152285995
I got banned from a Bendis forum once for Photoshopping out all the thought bubbles from a page of dialogue between Hank and Janet to make the point the art and spoken already told us what they were thinking
>>
>>152280298
Rob's the one people outside of comics knows about the most
People have never touched comics yet will know about Liefeld's infamy
>>
>>152286122
Post it
>>
>>152286122
Ignoring why you were on a Bendis forum in the first place, what was the page?
>>
>>152275243
>no sticky
This board is so fucking dead
>>
>>152277635
How does that last panel feel like a jump-scare?

I don't understand anyone who says Sal's work isn't impressive. It might not be not be art you frame and put on the wall of your dining room, but at telling the story it hits everything and more.
>>
File: from-the-avengers-91.png (610 KB, 983x593)
610 KB
610 KB PNG
>>152275243
RIP to one of the Marvel greats who worked on just about everything.
>>
>>152275243
>died three days before turning 90
Big OOF
>>
>>152275243
STICKY
>>
>>152286154
This was 10 years ago anon.
>>
>>152275243
RIP
>>
>>152281195
Holy kek.
>>
Rage against the mods for not stickying this!
>>
>>152287000
>How does that last panel feel like a jump-scare?
Because you're actually invested in the flow of panels and story rather than glossing over the page
>>
>>152275346
GOAT Spider-Man artist in my eyes. I know it's a hot take but his art is just what I see in my mind's eye when I think of classic Spidey. It'll always be a shame what they started doing to his lines around the era of the Clone Saga.
>>
RIP
>>
>>152275243
damn..
>>
>>152289911
damn indeed
>>
Toriyama was a better artist
>>
>>152291563
>Cross-eyed fivehead faggot was a better artist
>>
>>152280529
>as recent events have shown, to get a 1000+ sticky, you just have to be controversial and be a lightning rod for discussion and trolling. There is no other criteria.

Adam Scott gets a sticky and it's nothing but people complaining about politics

>>152282058
What's wrong anon, are you not excited for another /co/ created idea that's just soft core porn again?
>>
>>152291867
You fuck your own mother you godless swine.
>>
>>152292373
I can't fathom what I said that upset you like that so I'm just gonna call you a lowly nigger faggot, I'm probably right too
>>
>STILL no sticky
Sad. RIP.
>>
RIP
>no sticky
this site is dead.
>>
Sal Buscema was one of those essential artists to a comic book company. Marvel could toss a late book in his lap on a short deadline and he'd come through with a decent job. He relied a lot on stock poses, but could tell a story graphically.
>>
File: 1587676777631.gif (350 KB, 480x360)
350 KB
350 KB GIF
>Didn't get a sticky

Too late now. What a disgrace. Rest well Sal.
>>
Mods really are fags
>>
File: spec 202.jpg (282 KB, 951x1446)
282 KB
282 KB JPG
>>
File: super sal.jpg (50 KB, 487x800)
50 KB
50 KB JPG
>>
>>152295426
I can dig his superman art.
>>
>>152275243
R.I.P. big boss
>>
>>152287470
pure emotion in just three panels.
>>
>>152295720
He didn't do a whole lot of DC line work, mostly inks. Shame. I'd have liked to see him do more.
>>
bump
>>
>>152276042
thanks anon, conan is always welcomed.
>>
File: 1758155957676257.jpg (173 KB, 703x950)
173 KB
173 KB JPG
>>152294643
>>
>>152298326
pencils art is underrated in general.
>>
Necro bumping dead threads should be a bannable offense.
>>
>>152298326
>>152298906
yeah his colorist did him dirty.
>>
>>152283971
I don't think so.
>>
>no sticky Lame.
>>
How was this not sticked? Fuck /co/
>>
S T I C K, E
T
I
C
K
Y
>>
>>152275408
Indeed
>>
>>152299927
>>152300748

>>152292813
>>152287545

>>152285951
>>152284539
>>152282128
>>152281646
>>152281446
The fact this thread has been necrobumped for 2 days now and cant even break 400 replies proves he doesnt deserve a sticky you fucking faggots
Scotty Adams had 1000 replies in an hour, now thats a fucking sticky
>>
File: G3jUn5MW4AAZVF-.png (455 KB, 434x535)
455 KB
455 KB PNG
>>152301396
Was that because of Dilbert truly being popular and a buncha old anons coming out of the woodworks or just a thinly-veiled pressure release valve for /pol/ posters? Genuinely curious. Not like some sort of sarcastic comment.
Anyway here's a pic of Buscema drawing MJ hot as hell and working out.
The way I see it, stickys also warrant an influx of posting anyway so who can truly tell if that thread was popular or noteworthy beforehand. Sometimes it's clear, sometimes it's not.
Sal is good either way.
>>
>>152301396
>scotty
Kill yourself
>>
>>152275243
RIP
>>
>>152275243
GG
>>
>>152301396
bump
>>
>>152275243
F. Rest in peace.
>>
Rip Sal. Got the news from Chuck's youtube thing.
>>
Goddammit, what a shitty way to start 2026!
>>
>>152275886
The reality is the board moderation is in the gutter and people interested in discussing comics simply moved to other places. The N52 was an age full of bitching and yet the activity was bigger.
>>
>>152305339
Where should we go?
>>
>>152275243
RIP
>>
the lack of his hulk art in this thread is disburbing.
>>
>>152275801
A board split, I think, would be infinitely better than what we have now. I can't think of worse posters than cartoon posters, aside from spammers.
>>
>>152275243
live
>>
>>152309190
Too late.
>>
>>152309190
In our hearts
>>
>>152307607
Be the change you want to see
>>
File: Beating yourself up.jpg (144 KB, 567x836)
144 KB
144 KB JPG
>>152307607
Puny poster.
Not /co/ntributing while speaking such hollow words...
MAKES ME ANGRY
>>
>>152275243
RIP.



[Advertise on 4chan]

Delete Post: [File Only] Style:
[Disable Mobile View / Use Desktop Site]

[Enable Mobile View / Use Mobile Site]

All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective parties. Images uploaded are the responsibility of the Poster. Comments are owned by the Poster.