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So, how exactly did General Ross' mustache disappear when he transformed into Red Hulk?
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 01:45 |
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# ? May 23, 2024 17:55 |
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Hair stayed the same length* head got bigger? Pay no attention to any other hair for this theory.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 01:47 |
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Say Nothing posted:So, how exactly did General Ross' mustache disappear when he transformed into Red Hulk? Red Hulk's command voice ordered his mustache to police itself or he'd do it with his bare hands.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 03:00 |
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Lurdiak posted:Hulk isn't a hero, he's a metaphor for man's inability to find happiness within or without human society. I ran this down with my kids the other day: What colors do artists use on the hulk? Purple and green Who else is purple and green? All villains from Doom to Green Goblin Are any heros purple and green? No they are blue and red. Why is the Hulk purple and green then? TIH was not a Superhero comic because Marvel didn't write those. It was a horror comic. He wasn't a hero until they needed him to sell the Avengers.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 03:36 |
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In his defense, the giant robots he ripped the guns away from DID fail to heed his request for reasoned debate, and then ruined his bunny slippers. sticksy posted:This is pretty funny if you imagine this in Hulk’s voice/speaking style He was in one of his "smart Hulk" phases (and Terminator 2 was a big deal at the time). Jedit posted:He doesn't really need it. Hulk gets pissed off when he finds something he can't lift or smash, so he tends to escalate. Indeed! Straight to butts and killing. Though the butt thing was foreshadowed earlier in the issue... Infinitum posted:Whatever happened to Strongguy? The mutant who the more he used his powers the stronger he got, but the dumber he got? Let's hop to the final page of the issue and see!
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 03:49 |
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I don't know if Strong Guy has been written as particularly dumb in a long time. He was very, uh, curt in his handful of Claremont appearances, but PAD always wrote him as kind of a witty, sort of proto-Chandler Bing "90's Guy" in X-Factor, who wasn't exactly a super-scientist but an element of his character in that run was definitely that he rankled under being taken for a big dumb galoot.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 04:23 |
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Jonny Nox posted:I ran this down with my kids the other day:
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 06:15 |
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That's the issue where Impossible Man's son watches anime.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 06:39 |
Push El Burrito posted:That's the issue where Impossible Man's son watches anime. Shoujo anime.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 07:52 |
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Say Nothing posted:So, how exactly did General Ross' mustache disappear when he transformed into Red Hulk? 1. Okay, so when Ross turns into the Red Hulk, his mustache disappears but reappears when he reverts back to human form. 2. We've never seen Bruce Banner with a mustache. 3. When Ben Grimm turns into the Thing, the hair on the top of his head disappears but reappears when he reverts back to human form. 4. So if you've got a problem with Red Hulk, take it up with Stan and Jack.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 12:52 |
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Red Hulk II gets to keep his mustache. So who knows.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 12:58 |
We've totally seen Hulk and Banner with a beard, though. And bald. I mean that's the least of that story's problems, I can allow for a magic disappearing mustache that obfuscates the identity of Red Hulk. But that explanation doesn't hold water.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 12:59 |
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Edge & Christian posted:I never tire of talking about Jeph Loeb's explanation for this. It was on an old episode of the Word Balloon podcast and he laid it out like this.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 13:00 |
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Say Nothing posted:So, how exactly did General Ross' mustache disappear when he transformed into Red Hulk? Hulk is a state of mind. General Ross has had that mustache so long he'd forgotten he has it, so Red Hulk didn't know about it until someone (probably Deadpool during his Thunderbolts stint) asked Rulk where his mustache went (off-camera). The mustache appears now because it took a bit of time to for that cognitive dissonance to percolate. Hulks don't always pass thoughts on to their normal selves quickly. I mean, the real answer is "they wanted to obfuscate who the Red Hulk was when they introduced him." My assumption is the mustache was always there, it just wasn't drawn.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 13:05 |
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Jonny Nox posted:I ran this down with my kids the other day: Yeah, they really needed the character that nobody liked from the series canceled a year before hand to sell Avengers comics for two issues. Hulk was very definitely going full hero by the end of his series, though they were leaning into the misunderstood guy aspect of things.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 13:15 |
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Green is a pretty popular colour for heroes too.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 13:26 |
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DivineCoffeeBinge posted:Strong Guy didn't get dumber (though admittedly, he was never very bright, having debuted as Lila Cheney's bodyguard), but he had a heart condition, so if he kept absorbing kinetic energy (which is what charged his powers) eventually his heart would explode. The Beast was written like that for a few years in X-Factor. He got hit by Pestilence during the Fall of the Mutants - part of Apocalypse’s curse was that his strength increased, but every time he used it he became dumber. At one point he was pretty much the dopey sidekick that drooled all over himself until he got turned blue and furry and was healed by Infectia. It was a pretty neat concept - his strength kept multiplying as he used it, but at the cost of his mind. I can’t remember that ever being done again
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 13:54 |
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Random Stranger posted:Yeah, they really needed the character that nobody liked from the series canceled a year before hand to sell Avengers comics for two issues. The Hulk was a mess from the start. You saw that Stan really wanted to do the Jekyll and Hyde thing but had no idea how to execute it. His status quo literally changed every single issue of the original run of his series. He was gray, then green, then he could fly, he was controlled by Rick, he had Banner’s brain but Hulk’s body, he changed at night and then when he was stressed, he had a teen sidekick but was also sometimes a teenager’s buddy and/or slave.... Even once his series was cancelled they had no idea what to do. He was a hero in the Avengers for 2 issues, but then became the worlds greatest menace they still wanted on the team for some reason. He rampaged through New York in FF, but was a misunderstood wandering lummox in Amazing Spider-Man. He finally had SOME consistency once he got into Tales to Astonish, but he was a clusterfuck from the word go. And I LOVE the Hulk!
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 14:01 |
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Jonny Nox posted:I ran this down with my kids the other day: Doctor Spaceman posted:Green is a pretty popular colour for heroes too. Haven’t though as much about other secondary color combos (orange/green; orange/purple) and no characters spring to mind for those in a 10 second rundown. Racking my brain, I can’t think of any heroes from either side of the fence with this color scheme. But there’s at least a few big DC names that match up: Lex Luthor in power suit, Brainiac (most of the time), the Riddler, and the Joker’s usual outfit.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 17:31 |
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You'd probably get a kick out of this series of articles on colours and superheroes at Comics Alliance. http://comicsalliance.com/superhero-color-theory-primary-heroes/
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 17:42 |
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Nonvalueadded User posted:I like the cut of your parenting jib. Have them reason things out for themselves (with appropriate guidance). My daughter hated the Socratic Method growing up (applied from everything from homework to consequences for bad behavior) but now credits it as the cornerstone of her analytic brain. Wow. Well, that's one way to ensure your child grows up to despise you.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 19:02 |
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Jedit posted:once destroyed half an alien battle fleet after Captain America told him that said battle fleet had called him a pouf. Ugh, that was when I mentally checked out of Ultimates. Someone must thought they were really clever to resolve the plot that way.
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# ? Jul 2, 2018 19:38 |
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ecavalli posted:Wow. As to discipline, I believe that this helped my daughter develop greater empathy by really understanding how breaking certain rules inconvenienced or hurt other people. As to learning, it obviously instills deeper understanding. And now as she heads off to college, she and I talk pretty frankly with each other. She has her issues with me (what child doesn’t with a parent), but she’s told me that while it was painful at the time, using the Socratic Method helped her understand things, not just learn them, and that she’s glad I did that. Of course, if I really loved her, I would have skipped all that crap and just taken her out to see old adventure movies every night and then walked down poorly-lit alleys where trigger-happy gunmen waited to mug people. But I didn’t love her that much. e: Now watch Hulk smash thesis that knowledge is justified true belief, puny philosopher! Admiralty Flag fucked around with this message at 21:27 on Jul 2, 2018 |
# ? Jul 2, 2018 21:25 |
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This bugs me because there are plenty of "good" characters with a purple and green color scheme, and most of the iconic "purple and green" bad guys were the product of one of two people in a narrow window of time, and many of them are either just purple or just green anyway. It's like that thing about black characters with lightning powers-- it only has explanatory power because it keeps feeding on its own tail. After a few minutes of googling: the X-Men character Blink is more or less purple and green (sometimes more hot pink and green with purple hair, but there's colorist leeway here), and Beast Boy's look in many if not most of his more iconic versions matches his green fur with a purple and white or purple and black jumpsuit. The Wesley Dodds Sandman had a number of color variations but I'd hazard that the purple and green version is the most immediately recognizable, and the one that later depictions of him went back to the most frequently.The heroic Brainiac from the Legion of Superheroes is purple and green with a shock of blonde at the top. The Starlin version of Drax is green with a purple costume although to be fair he's deliberately supposed to evoke a kind of sinister image. The Green Lantern, Jade, had a purple and green motif for awhile, and Alan Scott's (admittedly very ugly) costume has purple and green elements. On the subject of Green Lanterns we might also include Katma Tui who, like Sinestro, has either purplish or pinkish skin depending on the colorist. The Prowler-- who, like Drax, was introduced as morally and visually ambiguous-- is purple with green accents. She-Hulk feels like a cheat because she's designed to echo, well, He-Hulk, but many variations of her pretty recognizable unitard look run with a white/purple/green color scheme. A ton of minor characters from the Milligan/Allred X-Factor/X-Statix. The hero the 90's refused to forget, Sleepwalker. Among Kirby creations we also have, of course, Triton (and if you take the original Inhumans as a cohesively designed group, further splashes of purple and green via Medusa and Karnak respectively). I think there's plenty to be said about color and semiotics in superhero comic books but I think that conversation has to begin with interrogating facile conclusions, eg., that there are no purple and green "good guys." I think there's an interesting pattern in that many of the "good" characters I've listed are either supposed to strike a sinister or villainous note (Drax, Sandman, Prowler) or suggest a quality of inhumanity (Beast Boy, aliens like Katma Tui, Triton) but that's a different conversation. I do think it's significant that a huge swathe of the iconic villains with this color scheme were created by Jack Kirby during his imperial phase at Marvel-- Annihilus, Molecule Man, the skrulls, Impossible Man, Kang, Diablo, the Wrecker, etc.-- and that a great deal of these (and other more monochrome purple or green characters like Galactus, the Mole Man, or Dr. Doom) were specifically created for a team of blue and orange characters, which might suggest either an idiosyncracy on Kirby's part or a situational desire to have bad-guys who contrasted in an exciting but not obnoxious way with the book's heroes. That fails to account, of course, for the relatively high amount of purple, green, or purple & green Ditko characters-- Mysterio, the Green Goblin, and the Lizard come to mind. And I do think its interesting that both artists leaned much less heavily on those specific color schemes-- blue and red/orange, and green and purple-- in their later work. We could also ask about how the material conditions of the comic book industry played a role in the story-- there's the oft-repeated and, as far as I know, true story about the Hulk going from grey to green because of poor color-seperating at the printer, and I'd guess that the highest concentration of green-skinned comic book extraterrestrials coincides with decades in which broader representations of space aliens leaned more towards "little green men" than the "greys" of the latter decades of the 20th century. I don't think the green and purple theory as helpfully expounded by the Impossible Man's kid in the aforeposted scan is totally baseless, but I also think it's more complicated than its usually set out to be, and resistant to glib conclusions, and that those glib conclusions-- and here I'm kind of grinding an axe about "color theory" in general across all kinds of mediums-- often depend on hand-waving or ignoring counter-evidence. For example the Comics Alliance article just posted often seems to be misreading or distorting characters for the sake of proving a point about color-- bluntly stating that blue and yellow characters "lack the red boldness of those seeking or destined to be front and center" and then having to clumsily account for Booster Gold a few paragraphs down. Edit: After poking around in regards to DC villains a little more, it feels like a lot of the "iconic" purple and green bad-guys solidify in the 70s and 80s-- Lex Luthor getting his armor and his jumpsuit, or Brainiac shifting away from his hot pink sweater. One could argue though that that's just the aftershock of Kirby and Ditko and a testimony to their enormous contributions to the visual grammar of the genre. How Wonderful! fucked around with this message at 21:54 on Jul 2, 2018 |
# ? Jul 2, 2018 21:45 |
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Archyduke posted:Edit: After poking around in regards to DC villains a little more, it feels like a lot of the "iconic" purple and green bad-guys solidify in the 70s and 80s-- Lex Luthor getting his armor and his jumpsuit, or Brainiac shifting away from his hot pink sweater. One could argue though that that's just the aftershock of Kirby and Ditko and a testimony to their enormous contributions to the visual grammar of the genre. You're talking about purple and green DC villains, and you forgot to mention the Joker?
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 08:17 |
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Jedit posted:You're talking about purple and green DC villains, and you forgot to mention the Joker? I also forgot Golden Age Catwoman, since as far as I know green hasn't been a big part of her ensemble in decades, and even purple has mostly been swapped out for black. I also just noticed that early Two Face's scarred side showed up with both green skin/purple suit and purple skin/green suit.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 16:25 |
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Wasn't purple popular back in the day because black reprod so badly on the paper/printing method?
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 18:40 |
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Scaramouche posted:Wasn't purple popular back in the day because black reprod so badly on the paper/printing method?
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 19:19 |
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Endless Mike posted:No, black has always been fine beyond potentially bleeding. It's gray that didn't reproduce consistently, which is why blue and purple were used to highlight black things (and eventually led to things like Psylocke's hair being canon purple even though it should be black). I meant in large flats; the line work obviously duplicates fine but larger expanses of black tended to blob out in my experience. Mind you that's from newsprint photography where if something was too black we'd run it through a larger dot pitch line camera to spread things out a bit, but old comics were probably still better quality paper than newspaper.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 19:26 |
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Endless Mike posted:No, black has always been fine beyond potentially bleeding. It's gray that didn't reproduce consistently, which is why blue and purple were used to highlight black things (and eventually led to things like Psylocke's hair being canon purple even though it should be black). It's also why Hulk is green!
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 19:40 |
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Nonvalueadded User posted:
The guy was in the Justice League, and yet everyone forgets poor Aquaman. Starfire is orange and wears purple. Not sure if this counts, but Ralph Dibny wore purple and had light ginger (which comes out orange in comics) hair.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 20:11 |
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Endless Mike posted:No, black has always been fine beyond potentially bleeding. It's gray that didn't reproduce consistently, which is why blue and purple were used to highlight black things (and eventually led to things like Psylocke's hair being canon purple even though it should be black). When Chris Claremont imported her into Uncanny X-Men he just sort of went "welp she's got purple hair, that's her thing". It wasn't purple highlights, it was purple like Doc Samson's hair is green. 3) When she turned into a ninja several years later her hair was dark purple, but even in the earliest appearances it was clearly "black with purple highlights" in a way distinct from people with black hair's "black with blue highlights". It's a crappy old scan of a print comic, but look at this: It's subtle and muddy but Mandarin and his assistant's hair is blue-black (as is her outfit) while her hair is purple-black. Within a couple of years they started using better printing techniques, and Psylocke's hair was even more purple, contrasted with other blue-black folks: Don't get me wrong, the purple hair has (to my knowledge) never had a good explanation, particularly how it transferred from one body to the next, but it has always been deliberate.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 20:22 |
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Forget the hair, why is she orange? It isn't a bad depiction of Asians because in the second picture the other Asians don't look like that. Anyway, she was blonde when she first appeared. She changed it to purple as part of her modelling career, in a story actually written by Alan Moore. Later her hair just became permanently purple.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 20:55 |
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Action Jacktion posted:Forget the hair, why is she orange? It isn't a bad depiction of Asians because in the second picture the other Asians don't look like that. I think it's supposed to be a tan?
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 20:57 |
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Apropos of nothing, Colossus and Jubilee (I think) posing together is extremely cute.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 21:48 |
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Like the Cable Pool floaty.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 21:49 |
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Can't wait to get into a pool after Beast has been in it.
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# ? Jul 3, 2018 21:50 |
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Scaramouche posted:I meant in large flats; the line work obviously duplicates fine but larger expanses of black tended to blob out in my experience. Mind you that's from newsprint photography where if something was too black we'd run it through a larger dot pitch line camera to spread things out a bit, but old comics were probably still better quality paper than newspaper. Thought of another villain-turned-hero with the purple & green color scheme — Hawkeye Archyduke posted:the X-Men character Blink is more or less purple and green...Beast Boy's look in many if not most of his more iconic versions matches his green fur with a purple and white or purple and black jumpsuit. The Wesley Dodds Sandman had a number of color variations... Brainiac from the Legion of Superheroes...Drax...Green Lantern, Jade, had a purple and green motif for awhile, and Alan Scott's (admittedly very ugly) costume has purple and green elements. On the subject of Green Lanterns we might also include Katma Tui ...The Prowler...and so on I think your points about Kirby & Ditko creating a lot of the better-known villains, and color-coding to contrast with heroes, are much stronger arguments. I do agree the article is pretty much blather.
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# ? Jul 4, 2018 00:50 |
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Endless Mike posted:No, black has always been fine beyond potentially bleeding. It's gray that didn't reproduce consistently, which is why blue and purple were used to highlight black things (and eventually led to things like Psylocke's hair being canon purple even though it should be black). It's also why early superheroes where rendered primarily in cyan, magenta, yellow and black or rudimentary combinations thereof.
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# ? Jul 4, 2018 01:07 |
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# ? May 23, 2024 17:55 |
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I am Wolverine's Daisy dukes.
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# ? Jul 4, 2018 06:01 |