After a week of mummies and skull-monsters, the Blonde in a Red Dress is already bored with her Friday night date.
Ten-Story Love v30 #1, by Ace
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
After a week of mummies and skull-monsters, the Blonde in a Red Dress is already bored with her Friday night date.
Ten-Story Love v30 #1, by Ace
Her mother always warned her to wear clean (and armor-plated) undergarments just in case her red dress/spacesuit accidentally gets lost while being carried away by a gibbering hellbeast smashing through cement walls.
Fantastic #8, by Youthful Magazine
Yes, technically this isn’t a red dress, but I’m going to assume it just got extra dusty while she was working in the museum. It would be a lot easier to keep clean if the mummies would stop breaking things.
Web of Mystery #7, by Ace
Mirror, mirror, on the wall… keep your hands to yourself, creep!
Strange Mysteries #4, by Superior Comics
The Blonde in a Red Dress breaks all the (vaguely undefined) rules.
Boy Meets Girl #20, by Lev Gleason
I’d curse too, if I had to deal with a bug infestation like this.
Tales of Horror #4, by Toby
Lettering problems and advice, illustrated: It’s a very small difference of spacing between “GLITTERED” and “GUTTERED”.
True Love Problems And Advice Illustrated #13, by Harvey
This is one of those comic covers where there seems to be too much going on in too little amount of time.
Crime Smashers #8, by Trojan
Wow, that’s an up-to-the-minute news headline!
(And yes, I’m still considering this a “Blonde in a Red Dress” cover, if we assume the orange coloring is due to being a strawberry blonde under dim streetlights.)
Who Is Next? #5, by Standard Comics
Terrifying! Startling! Suspenseful! Strange! Mysterious! (And that’s just the words describing the questionable perspective and relative sizes of everyone on this cover!)
Strange Mysteries #9, by Superior Comics