Not sure why the bamboo walls of the hut are red, but it allowed our heroine to try avoiding her captor’s attention by blending into the background using the inherent stealth camouflage of her Red Dress.
Fight Comics #20, Fiction House
The ubiquitous cover girl of the Golden Age of comics!
Not sure why the bamboo walls of the hut are red, but it allowed our heroine to try avoiding her captor’s attention by blending into the background using the inherent stealth camouflage of her Red Dress.
Fight Comics #20, Fiction House
Death Trap Week concludes with our heroine in danger of being burned at the stake… next to a bundle of dynamite… at a highly flammable petroleum refinery… while killer birds attack gunmen on rooftops and a guy in a fedora punches a guy in a sombrero…
Or in other words, just another typical Friday for the Blonde in a Red Dress.
Silver Streak Comics #23, Lev Gleason
The Blonde in a Red Dress is outraged that she wasn’t given proper safety goggles like everyone else in the room, prompting the Fighting Yank to continue his two-fisted crusade against those who would ignore proper safety regulations when testing Mad Science Death Rays.
The Fighting Yank #17, Nedor
If this was a modern action movie, someone would be making a quip about an “acid trip.”
Startling Comics v7 #21, Pines
The “Ocular Stab-o-matic Action Playset” was promptly recalled due to safety concerns.
V …- Comics #2, Fox Features
Gasp! Not only is this secret spy base filled with flammable oil drums and a hand-cranked girl-squishing gear wheel of doom, it also lacks proper safey railings! Good thing the Blue Beetle is here to punish those who flout proper safety regulations!
The Blue Beetle #12, Holyoke
The Blonde in a Red Dress has played lots of roles where she had to do her own stunts, but thankfully very few where she had to dress up in anthropomorphic cartoon funny animal costumes for an off-brand wacky “laugh-fest of gaily colored comics”.
Zoot Comics #2, by Fox
The Blonde in a Red Dress seems so disappointed in the quality of her would-be rescuer that she’s avoiding eye contact. (Not sure if it’s because of something to do with the Boy Detective himself, or just that he’s a substantial step down from her usual larger-than-life super-hero guest stars.)
Boy Detective #4, by Avon
The Blonde in a Red Dress is so relieved at her timely rescue by a vigilante heroine that she doesn’t even ask what a name like “Miss Fury” has to do with a costume that has cute cat ears on the cowl.
Miss Fury #3, by Medallion Publishing
Considering how many times the Blonde in a Red Dress has had to play the damsel in distress for the heroes, it’s only fair that she gets to rescue them every now and then too.
Black Hood Comics #18, MLJ/Archie