Giant-Size Marvels: December 2009 Archives

Déjà Vu: Seasons Greetings from Gil Kane, 1976

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Marvel Treasury Edition 13 1976 by Gil Kane and John Romita, Joe Sinnott

Here is the original black and white artwork for Marvel Treasury Edition #13 (1976) by Gil Kane (inked by either Romita or Sinnott or both).  You can see the paste-up logos over the artwork.  I did another post a year ago that featured Kane's sketch layout for this Giant Superhero Holiday Grab Bag.  Nuff said!

In 1974 Marvel introduced us to something a heck of lot larger than good old Giant-Size comics: Marvel Treasury Sized Editions. 10” x 13” suckers that were so big, they fell over on the newsstand.  And while they mostly contained reprints, Marvel put in a few special features in the early editions.

Marvel Treasury Edition 1 classic cover by John Romita Sr, 1974

100 Pages of Spider-Man were wrapped around a John Romita (Sr) cover featuring the web-slinger in a classic pose.  I say thee nay—classic is too weak a word. It’s archetypal!  How could a kid not want to buy this comic if they were a Spidey fan?  If I were Disney, I’d take this image and slap it on mugs, T-shirts, and all kinds of merchandise.

Marvel Treasury Edition 1 intro by Stan Lee

The inside front cover featured an editorial by Stan the Man—can you dig his mad mod haircut and full beard?  Crazy, man.

Marvel Treasury Edition 1 Daily Bugle page 1

There was also a double page mockup of the Daily Bugle, with Marie Severin providing the “photographs”.

Marvel Treasury Edition 1 Daily Bugle page 2

The second page of the Bugle shows the Bullpen hard at work and also announces Ross Andru joining Gerry Conway on Amazing.

Marvel Treasury Edition 1 table contents page, classic villains

The table of contents page featured a gallery of headshots by Romita, comprised of Spider-Man’s friends and foes.

Marvel Treasury Edition 1 back cover by Romita Sr

The back cover was another Romita headshot, accompanied by the possibly the most famous quote from any comic book.

I was thrilled to get this in 1974, and I still get one when I pull out my beat up copy.  The Treasury Editions that followed in the first year were pretty good as well—most notably the Fantastic Four (with the Galactus Trilogy) and Conan (with Barry Smith’s Red Nails) editions.  Nuff said!

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This page is a archive of entries in the Giant-Size Marvels category from December 2009.

Giant-Size Marvels: November 2009 is the previous archive.

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