- Joe Sinnott
Joe Sinnott (born October 16, 1926, Saugerties, New York, United States) is an American comic book artist. Working primarily as an inker, Sinnott is best-known for his long stint on Marvel Comics' "The Fantastic Four", from 1965 to 1981 (with a brief return in the late 1980s), initially over the pencils of industry legend Jack Kirby. Years before, he'd inked Kirby's "Fantastic Four" #5, the issue introducing Dr. Doom, … - Rich Buckler
Richard "Rich" Buckler is an American comic book artist and penciller, best known for his work on Marvel Comics' "The Fantastic Four" in the mid-1970s and, with writer Doug Moench, co-creating the character Deathlok in "Astonishing Tales" #25. Buckler broke into comics at age 18, with the four-page historical story "Freedom Fighters: Washington Attacks Trenton" in the King Features comic book "Flash Gordon" #10, November 1967. - Vince Colletta
Vincent Joseph Colletta (born October 15, 1923 in Casteldaccia, Sicily; died 1991) was a highly prolific American comic book artist best known as one of Jack Kirby's Silver Age inkers, including on landmark early issues of Marvel Comics' "Fantastic Four" and a long, celebrated run on the character Thor in "Journey into Mystery" and "The Mighty Thor". - Steve Yeowell
Steve Yeowell is a British comics artist, well-known for his work on the long-running science fiction and fantasy weekly comic "2000AD". Having trained in 3D design (specialising in silversmithing and jewellery), Yeowell began drawing comics purely for pleasure, with no particular intention to become a professional artist. Having shown his portfolio to artist Bryan Talbot, he quickly found himself given work by Swiftsure (on the "Lieutenant Fl'ff" strip), … - Sol Brodsky
Sol Brodsky (born April 22, 1923, Brooklyn, New York City, New York, United States; died June 4, 1984) was an American comic book artist who, as Marvel Comics' Silver Age production manager, was one of the key architects of the small company's expansion to a major pop culture conglomerate. He later rose to vice president, operations and vice president, special projects. "Sol was really my right-hand man for years", described Marvel editor and company patriarch Stan Lee. - Artie Simek
Artie Simek, sometimes credited as Art Simek (living status unknown), was an American comic-book letterer for Marvel Comics throughout the companies various iterations from the 1940s. Along with Sam Rosen, he was considered one of the best in the field, and one of the two lettered virtually every landmark Marvel comic, with Simek's working including "The Fantastic Four" #1 (Nov. 1961) and Spider-Man's debut in "Amazing Fantasy" #15 (Aug. - Gordon Purcell
Gordon Purcell is an American comic book artist, perhaps best known for his "Star Trek" work, in particular his photorealistic renditions of the actors who play that franchise’s characters, as well as those of similarly licensed books, such as "X-Files", "Xena", "Lost in Space", "Godzilla", "The Young Indiana Jones Chronicles", "Barb Wire", and "The Terminator". Purcell grew up reading Marvel Comics and DC Comics, … - Mercury Studio
Mercury Studio is a Portland, Oregon-based illustration studio, founded in 2002. Members of the studio work both individually and as collaborators on a number of high-profile mainstream and independent comic books. These include Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman, Spider-Man, The Fantastic Four, World's Finest, Swamp Thing, and Fables. - Brad Case
Brad Case (1912-March 19, 2006) was an animator and sequence director. He has also worked as a layout artist, storyboard artist, and a story director. His collaborative partners in animation include Ub Iwerks, Raphael Wolff, Paul Fennell and Larry Harmon. He began his career as an animator in "Bambi". His first recorded screen credit was for the 1944 Donald Duck short "The Plastics Inventor". - Warner E. Leighton
Warner Emerson Leighton (March 21, 1930 - March 20, 2005) was an American film, sound, music, effects and supervising editor. The youngest of nine children, he married his sweetheart Marion E. Gridley on March 6, 1951. During the 1960s Warner had edited a lot of William Hanna and Joseph Barbera cartoons such as The Flintstones, The Jetsons, Atom Ant, Scooby Doo, The Secret Squirrel Show, Johnny Quest, Hey There, It's Yogi Bear, and Space Ghost. - Heather
You can't get much weirder than me. Well, you probably could, but it would really freak you out. I'm a movie quoter, a punster, a prankster, a hard worker, a photographer, a writer, a marching band groupie, an App State football fan for life, a diehard wolfpack girl, a mountain girl (I so love living in Boone!!!), a friend, a sister, a daughter, and a follower of Christ. Simple as that. - Erika Goodman
My name is Erika Denise Goodman and go to school at The University of Alabama where I major in Journalism and minor in Spanish. I love UA football and Tuscaloosa. :) - Catherine Lewis
I'm a boring person. Also, I don't think anyone reads these anyway. - Esau
- Frankie
- Walter Wood
- Charles L Wampler
- Rick M Atwell
- Tony White
- Marlena Morton
- Diana Kaufman
- Michael Day
- Christopher Trillo
- Amy McCleary
- Gerald Butler
- David A Spencer
- Randy C Anflick
- Jaimie Casillas
- Adolfo Vergara
- Eric Friedman
- Don Seichert
- Lewis Learmard
- Stephen C Morgan
- Mark Noldine
- Annette Dobson
- George F Hull
- Randall Alms Condon
- Danny Goldman
- Rik Ford
- Bennett Irish
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