Our heroine trades in her Red Dress for a Red Spacesuit, for a week of “weird adventures on other worlds” in “the universe of the future”!
Planet Comics #12, Fiction House
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
Our heroine trades in her Red Dress for a Red Spacesuit, for a week of “weird adventures on other worlds” in “the universe of the future”!
Planet Comics #12, Fiction House
The Redhead in a Yellow Dress quickly discovers that being a sci-fi/fantasy/horror/pulp adventure cover model like the Blonde in a Red Dress isn’t all sunshine and dream jewels.
Planet Comics #22, Fiction House
Diamonds are a space pirate swordswoman’s best friend!
Wonder Comics #17, Pines
This is what happens when the Blonde in a Red Dress decides to take up gardening as a hobby for her New Years Resolution.
Fantastic Adventures v10 #9
Shooting through holes in the spaceship windows? Once again, I’m not sure that’s how outer space is supposed to work.
Startling Comics #51
I’m… I’m pretty sure that’s NOT how outer space works.
Startling Comics #50, Pines
Yikes! That robot better be waterproof, or this could end up like those cautionary tales about a hairdryer in a bathtub.
Startling Comics #49, Pines
The Blonde in Red warned those leering space aliens that the Space Detective would zap ’em if they got fresh.
Startling Comics #48, Pines
The Blonde in Red is clearly startled! (Less by her epic sci-fi predicament with giant space bugs and more by the fact that the Fighting Yank somehow still got himself top billing despite not showing up for the cover.)
Startling Comics #44, Pines
The Blonde in Red discovers that being a superhero is hard work. Unless you can pass yourself off as a damsel in distress, in which case you can have plausible deniability to sit back and make your teammates do all the work.
America’s Best Comics #24, Pines