Her gal pals may have bad posture, but at least they won’t laugh when the Blonde in Red tries out her new outfits, unlike certain other people.
Kitty #1, St. John
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
Her gal pals may have bad posture, but at least they won’t laugh when the Blonde in Red tries out her new outfits, unlike certain other people.
Kitty #1, St. John
Who can that attractive girl be?
Aggie Mack #8, Superior Comics
The Blonde in a Red Dress would never have dared ask for a shopping bag if she had known the city was so strict in enforcing its anti-plastic-bag regulations.
True Crime Comics v1 #6, Magazine Village
Someday they’ll look back on this and laugh when they realize the Blonde in a Red Dress wasn’t actually trying to sneak out to double-cross the gang, she was just trying to find a dentist to take a look at a loose filling.
Crimes By Women #8, Fox Features
I dunno, maybe the Blonde in a Red Dress should ask Persephone for advice?
Complete Romance #1, Avon
In this flashback, we see a young Blonde in Red using her psychic powers to halt a train before it can hit a reckless boy who was running across the railroad tracks without looking.
New Heroic Comics #52, Eastern
What’s the point of reading a story if they’re going to put spoilers right on the cover?
Joe Palooka #33, Harvey
Say what you want about the over-the-top crazy space adventures of the Blonde in a Red Dress, at least she avoids bland generic sci-fi covers.
Planet Comics #58, Fiction House
Sure, they’ve been caught behind enemy lines, but at least the ever-stylish Blonde in a Red Dress is looking “glamorous” in her skirt and designer shoes when sneaking across a remote snow-covered military border zone.
Spy-Hunters #3, ACG
Not sure of the reasoning for the odd choice of cover concept, other than for the Blonde in Red to help confirm that Boone Marlowe is NOT actually a vampire trying to sneak in from a horror comic.
Outlaws v1 #9, DS Publishing