Archive for February, 2025

Posted Wednesday, February 26th, 2025 by Barry

Update: Spider-Man Kids Julehefte (2009)

Back in June of 2020 I interrupted Summer with a Christmas tradition from Norway. At the time I had very little information on the book. By accident I was able to find out a little more, so here’s an update:

The julehefter, or Christmas booklets, have been a Norwegian tradition for over two centuries. Lately the term julehefte has become a synonym for comic book. The first julehefte was printed in 1817 and was a collection of social and drinking songs. It wasn’t until 1845 juleheftes were geared more for children. Their popularity grew and by the end of the 19th century they included  a variety of themes including art, literature, recipes and religion.

2009

The first Christmas comic book was based on the U.S. cartoon The Katzenjammer Kids and published in 1911. Eventually other licenses would join the fold such as Donald Duck, Tom & Jerry, Calvin and Hobbes and, obviously, Marvel titles such as Spider-Man.

Apparently there were three published between 2009 and 2011.

Currently there are around 50 Christmas booklets published each season, some selling as many as 150,000 copies or more.

 

So, while there’s still snow on the ground and portions of Christmas somewhere undiscovered till the spring clean, here’s a little more information on the tantalizing illustration from a couple years back. To see the original post, click here.

2010

2011

Posted Monday, February 24th, 2025 by Barry

It’s in the cards

Today is a day to commemorate wax packs, stale sticks of gum and cardboard likenesses from sports figures to movie scenes.

Sometimes referred to as Topps Trading Card Day, this is also National Trading Card Day.

Trading cards, or more specifically, baseball cards, were first manufactured in the 1860s. As the twentieth century dawned, baseball cards began being packaged with candy or tobacco products. Goudy Gum Company is credited with initially including gum with the product in 1933.

1940 Superman card

While The Topps Company was originally the largest of the baseball card companies, it was Bowman Gum Company – before they were bought by Topps – who produced the 1940s Superman-based set of collectible cards. The set consists of 72 cards in all, each featuring a full-color drawing of Superman. Naturally these, and others of their ilk, are the collectible card sets we’ll be focusing on today.

Donruss licensed the Marvel stable of heroes for a set of 66 in 1966.

They were overshadowed by their Distinguished Competition that same year when Topps produced a 55 companion card set riding ABC’s popular television series coattails featuring the Caped Crusader.

By the 1970s, Marvel was surpassing DC in sales and popularity. Topps chose to commit to a line of stickers featuring the House of Idea’s characters and corny one-liners.

Fantasy Trade Company featured replicas of Marvel first issue covers on cardstock in 1984.

Though the Superman and Batman movies generated trading card sets, let’s focus on the source material.

In 1991 Marvel opened the floodgates with an Impel printed 167 card set. Five chase holograms were featured –  Spider-Man, Magneto, Silver Surfer, Wolverine and Spider-Man v. Green Goblin.

Impel offered a set of 180 DC Comics cards that same year complete with 10 holograms.

Offerings continue to this day from various card companies featuring various publishers’ products.

1984 Marvel first issue trading card 

Posted Thursday, February 20th, 2025 by Barry

The Prize Disguise

Join Archie and the gang – and us – as we celebrate National Cherry Pie Day.
Why cherry pie? Why not.

Why February 20? ‘Cuz it’s close to President’s Day (February 17) and the story of George Washington chopping down the cherry tree.

Pies came to America courtesy of the early English settlers. Pies were cooked in long, narrow pans called coffyns. As in Roman times the crust was often left uneaten.

To celebrate the day bake a cherry pie, visit a bakery, teach someone to bake and share your experience online at #NationalCherryPieDay.

Ironically enough, Archie’s grand prize for the prettiest girl in school are pies. Enough of those and those swimsuits will be a moot point.

Anyway, have a piece on us.

Posted Tuesday, February 18th, 2025 by Barry

Mickey Mouse series one issue one

For almost a century Pluto was known as the ninth planet. Yet the designation was stripped away in 2006 when the celestial body was down graded to a dwarf planet.
American astronomer Clyde Tombaugh is credited for finding Pluto on Feb. 18, 1930. Hence, why today is known as Pluto Day.

For we four-color connoisseurs, today is better represented by the mustard colored mutt from the Disney collection.

Mickey Mouse series one issue one

Faithful Pluto the dog first appeared in comic books in Mickey Mouse series one in 1931.

Mickey Mouse comic books were originally published in Italy and the United Kingdom in the early part of the 1930s. America followed suit with Mickey Mouse Magazine series in 1935.

Publishing chores changed hands throughout the years until the Disney family settled in with Dell Comics Four Color one-shots in 1943. It was another 10 years before they were given a regular series that ran through 1990.

Posted Friday, February 14th, 2025 by Barry

I Think You’re X-Tra Special Valentine

Happy Valentine’s Day.

Hopefully you’ve enjoyed wading through the ones we’ve found as much as we’ve enjoyed finding ’em. The day is here, so look quick and go do something with that special someone.

Close to one billion Valentines are sent each year; whether that be via mail or hand delivered. At last count, and that was 2010, an estimated 15 million e-valentines were sent.

The next time you shell out money for a valentine card, thank Esther Howland. Don’t look for her on Facebook or any other social media outlet. She’s been dead since 1904.

Her father owned the largest book and stationary store in the city of Worcester. He catered to his daughter’s wishes importing paper lace and floral decorations imported from England to create her own valentine cards. Her family was conscripted to further the endeavor. One brother with particularly good penmanship wrote the inscriptions. Her other brother who was a salesman began hawking the cards. Orders flooded in and friends and other family members were recruited to keep up with the deluge.

By 1850 she had turned the family business into an annual $100,000 success story. She retired in 1881, selling the business to the George C. Whitney Company, the New England Valentine Co.

With one last Valentine’s Day card to post, let’s go with Marvel’s Logan/Wolverine. While he may not seem to be the playboy Tony Stark is, Logan has had his share of lady friends. For example: Storm, Jean Grey, Mariko Yashisda, Mystique, Domino, Rogue, Silver Fox, Elektra, Itsu, Yukio, Black Cat, Lady Deathstrike and Snow Bird.

Again, happy Valentine’s Day, from us to you. We hope you like the card.

Posted Thursday, February 13th, 2025 by Barry

Happy Valentines Day…Teacher!

And, lest we forget, everyone should show their teacher a little love on Valentine’s Day.

Often there is that unrequited interest a student will show for their instructor. As long as it doesn’t progress to the point of the Police’s Don’t Stand So Close to Me, there’s no problem. Teachers actually receive the most Valentine’s Day cards each year. Next are children followed by mothers and wives.

The tradition of exchanging cards in the class room began more than 70 years ago. If you’ve been following the postings this Valentine’s season, you’ll have seen cards dating as far back as 1940. It was recorded that Fred Roth, a fourth grader in a small farming town in Lewiston, Minnesota, gave his sweetheart, Louise Wirt, a Valentine’s Day card in 1917. He may have started the tradition that continues to this day.

The card reads, “Forget me not!

I ask of thee

Reserve one spot

In your heart for me.”

The two would eventually marry. The card has outlasted both and now is in the possession of their granddaughter.

Posted Wednesday, February 12th, 2025 by Barry

Valentine, you’re a super friend!

While this card is plainly geared for a more platonic relationship, Captain America, or Steve Rogers, has had his share of romantic interests.

Cap’s first love was Betsy Ross. Not the one believed to be the mother of the American flag, but a character introduced in the pre-Marvel era. Ross was also the Golden Age super heroine Golden Girl.

1979 Captain America Valentine Card

When Marvel brought Cap back, his history was retrofitted with another first love named Peggy Carter. Like her predecessor, Peggy was a woman Cap met during the war. All evidence of Betsy was dispatched with and Peggy essentially took her place sans super powers. Instead, Peggy was a member of the French resistance. It is unclear is she even knew Cap’s real identity.

When Cap met his fate in the waning days of World War II, Peggy suffered amnesia.

Cap would later meet Sharon Carter. When he was initially unfrozen, World War II was only two decades old, so Sharon was made a younger sister of Peggy. As time passed, her heritage was changed to grand niece to better fit the real passage of time. While they shared a strong bond for many years, their time together passed and the two became close friends instead.

Bernie Rosenthal entered the picture in the early 1980s during John Byrne’s historic year-long run on the title. At one point the two became engaged, but the nuptials were curtailed when Bernie moved to Ohio to attend law school. The two remained close after and she even represented Bucky for crimes he committed as the Winter Soldier.

Love is never simple. Especially in the Marvel Universe.

Posted Tuesday, February 11th, 2025 by Barry

Vintage Valentine’s Day with Superman

Geoffrey Chaucer penned Parliament of Fowls in 1382. The poem was a dream vision of birds searching for their mates:

In modern English:

“For this was on Saint Valentine’s Day

When every bird comes to choose his match

Of every kind that men may think of

And that so huge a noise they began to make

That the Earth and air and tree and every lake

Was so full, that not easily was there space

For me to stand – so full was all the place.”

The earliest reference to February 14 as a celebration of love is in the Charter of Court of Love. Issued in 1400 by Charles VI of France at Mantes-la-Jolie was to host a feast, love songs, poetry competitions, jousting and dancing for members of the royal court. Included would be a portion of the festivities where lovers disputes would be heard and ruled upon.

1940 Superman Valentine

Jumping ahead a few centuries, The Young Man’s Valentine Writer was released by a British publisher. The volume was a primer for young lovers to compose amorous verses. By this time a limited number of cards were pre-printed to be sent to loved ones. In 1835, 60,000 Valentine cards were mailed within the United Kingdom.

That number would increase to 400,000 when postage rates dropped in 1840.

Valentine’s Day has only found more traction with the passage of time until it celebrant spent in excess of $25 billion dollars in 2024. That breaks down to over $181 per person.

The Superman card representing the continued countdown came from an era where much less was spent on sappy salutations, but the point came across anyway.

Posted Monday, February 10th, 2025 by Barry

From Zero to Hero in One Bite

What a complicated web Stan, Steve, John and all who followed have woven for Spider-Man over the years.

Little did studious Peter Parker know when he attended the science exhibit his life would change forever. One spider bite later and Marvel’s flagship was born.

Whether it was the radioactive spider or Peter coming of age, the floodgates of romance burst open. His first lady love was Betty Brant.  J. Jonah’s secretary and the freelance photographer discovered some workplace chemistry ’till reporter Ned Leeds intervened.

Leeds’ interest and Betty’s eventual hatred of Spider-Man would end the romance almost before it began.

Waiting in the wings was Liz Allen. Liz began as the BMOC’s girl, but later found herself swayed by Peter’s low-key charm. Fate intervened with an uncle turned super villain and Liz would fade from the title for a decade or more.

Eventual wife Mary Jane Watson began as a blind date Peter ran as fast as he could from. Even after they began dating, he had eyes for a curvy blond, then involved with his friend Harry Osbourn.

Peter and Harry eventually swapped ladies and Gwen Stacy became his first true love. She would meet with an untimely end courtesy of Harry’s father Norman, aka the Green Goblin.

Mary Jane returned as an on again-off again girlfriend. Peter would even propose to her while still in college. She would decline the offer and head west.

Betty Brant, estranged from her husband, would return for a brief time and Felicia Hardy, the Black Cat, would enter Peter’s life as an admirer. They were an item until Peter learned Felicia was only interested in Spider-Man.

In grad school Peter would meet Deborah Whitman, but he was never as serious about her as she was with him.

Mary Jane would eventually return and this time accept his proposal. This would last until the One More Day story arc.

All this, plus a super-hero career. Wow.

Posted Sunday, February 9th, 2025 by Barry

Hard to Handle

Wonder Woman is featured on this 1978 Mark 1 and DC Comics collaboration for a little steamy come on.

With Superman raking in big bucks from the big screen, Wonder Woman was tackling the small screen. The Lynda Carter vehicle would run three seasons, 1975 to 1979, on, first ABC, then switching to CBS for seasons two and three.

Her origins date back to 1941 and All-Star Comics issue eight. The Amazon was the creation of polygraph inventor William Moulton Marston with the suggestion she be a woman by his wife, Elizabeth.

Much of her early career would be shaped by Moulton’s somewhat speculative personal life and marriage arrangement with his wife and live-in friend Olive Byrne.

Early issues featured both male and female domination situations, but any overt connotations were neutered by the Comics Code when it began to police the field.

Over the years Diana Price/Wonder Woman would be linked to some of the biggest names in DC Comics, most notably Superman and Batman, but more the Man of Steel.

Yet, her true love of decades was Steve Trevor.