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#bill woggon
fashioninpaper · 13 hours
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balu8 · 4 months
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Katy Keene
Pep Comics #90
by Bill Woggon
Archie
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dirtyriver · 2 years
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Katy Keene #37, November 1957, by Bill Woggon
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mudwerks · 2 months
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(via and everything else too: March of the Mannequins!)
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inky-curves · 1 year
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Katy Keene by Bill Woggon From Wilbur Comics #12 (April 1947)
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Katy Keene by Bill Woggon
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tomoleary · 24 days
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Bill Woggon “Katy Keene” Pin-Up Parade #11 page 60 Original Art (Radio/Archie, 1960) Source
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smashedpages · 1 year
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Archie Comics has been posting their digest collections since forever, and recently they started including new stories in them. Even more recently, they’ve begun including various superhero and genre characters from their back catalog -- including Nevada Jones, who appeared in back-up stories in Zip Comics and Pep Comics.
He’s included in a story we just previewed on Smash Pages, so I went digging for any background info I could find on him for the post. He first appeared in Zip Comics #1 back in 1940, and, as the mask might indicate, he’s a take-off on another masked cowboy who debuted about seven years before that. Most places on the web list his creator as “unknown,” but Bill Woggon, creator of Katy Keene, seemed to do a lot of work on the character, so I suspect it might have been him.
(I’ve asked my contact with Archie if they know, and I’ll update this when I hear back).
Update: the consensus around the Archie office is that Woggon did create Nevada Jones.
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harry-sussex · 5 months
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"Katie Keen."
Katy Keene is a character created by Bill Woggon that has appeared in several comic book series published by ARCHIE Comics since 1945.
Jesus, did Meghan think she was being funny? What did Catherine do to deserve this?
This has gone to far. And it is so completely transparent now. I am disgusted. To think I stood by and defended these two through everything. I an honestly the most angry with myself.
Sorry, what did I miss about the Archie comics? Did Meghan say something? Or did Omid? Is Katie Keen a bad character or something?
Agreed on your last two points. I was in her camp FOREVER, even when the rest of her apologists were collapsing at every turn, but this is it for me, and it sounds like it is for you too. We were so blind. Heartbreaking, isn’t it? What did Kate do? What the fuck is Meghan’s problem? Why stoop so low and then prance around with a “holier than thou” attitude that is as transparent as glass? Good people don’t do this and yet her entire brand tries to play up how much better she is than everyone. We were so blind. Looking back, it is so obvious that it’s personal against Kate, and that it’s coming from Meghan (categorically not Harry). Harry isn’t good enough of an actor to have lied about how he’s felt about Kate all these years. It’s Meghan - why isn’t Harry stopping her? What the fuck is going on in Montecito?
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fashioninpaper · 4 days
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balu8 · 4 months
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Pep Comics #90: Katy Keene
by Bill Woggon
Archie
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dirtyriver · 2 years
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"More Katy Keene Fashions" in Suzie Comics #61, February 1948, by Bill Woggon
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femmes-et-art · 11 months
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Katy Keene par Bill Woggon.
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vintage-mode · 2 years
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Bill Woggon, 1960.
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lboogie1906 · 2 years
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Floyd E. Norman (born June 22, 1935) is an animator, writer, and comic book artist. He worked for several animation companies, among them Walt Disney Animation Studios, Hanna-Barbera Productions, Ruby-Spears, Film Roman, and Pixar. His love for animated pictures started when he watched the Disney feature films Dumbo and Bambi. He had his start as an assistant to Katy Keene comic book artist Bill Woggon. He was employed as an inbetweener on Sleeping Beauty at The Walt Disney Company, becoming the first African-American artist to remain at the studio on a long-term basis. Following his work on Sleeping Beauty, he was drafted and returned to the studio after his service to work on One Hundred and One Dalmatians and The Sword in the Stone. After Walt Disney saw some of the inter-office sketches he made to entertain his co-workers, he was reassigned to the story department, where he worked with Larry Clemons on the story for The Jungle Book. He left the Disney studio to co-found Vignette Films, Inc., with business partner animator/director Leo Sullivan. Vignette Films, Inc. produced six animated films and was one of the first companies to produce films on the subject of black history. #africanhistory365 #africanexcellence https://www.instagram.com/p/CfGuTWoLCkluiuMMZCp2PpnpuDDnzahlcmFnqA0/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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