#Illustrations by TIM LOPEZ
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Tim Drake: Robin Vol 1 #1 (Cover art by Ricardo Lopez Ortiz)
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Cover for Tim Drake: Robin #1
#comics#dc#dc comcis#ricardo lopez ortiz#artists on tumblr#robin#tim drake#gotham#comic book art#illustration#drawing#cover art#young justice#ink#comic books
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Coming up on Heritage Auctions next week in their next Art & Animation Select Auction are a few British comic art items, including a great Dan Dare page from Eagle, by Frank Hampson and team.
First, there’s a smashing page by Commando cover artist Ken Barr, a page from for Hot Stuf’ a US anthology magazine edited by Sal Quartuccio, published in 1978, the issue also including contributions from Neal Adams. Bil and Nish Maher, Tim Boxell, Ernie Colon, Nicola Cuti, Rich Larson.
(Abe Book has a copy of the magazine itself on offer here, from a US-based seller)
Next, a "Dan Dare" cover for Eagle Volume One No.21 by Frank Hampson and team. Created in ink and watercolour over graphite on three illustration board sections joined with tape, with a combined image area of 14.25" x 18.75". The blank space is, of course, where the Eagle logo would be on publication.
How about Episode H753 of “Jeff Hawke” for the Daily Express by Sydney Jordan, signed by the artist? It seems like extraterrestrials are gathering human specimens for their research in this classic episode of the strip, which over its long run, gained an especially strong following in Continental Europe. Ink, white paint, and letratone over graphite on illustration board with an image area of approximately 15" x 4.75".
Plus, check out Episode H4928 of “Jeff Hawke” for the Daily Express by Sydney Jordan, signed by the artist. Ink and letratone over graphite on illustration board with an image area measures 15" x 4”, signed twice, front and back, by Jordan.
Artists whose work also features in this auction include Sergio Aragonés, Peter Bagge, Ken Barr, Pat Broderick and Bob Wiacek, John Byrne and Tom Palmer, Milton Caniff, Howard Chaykin, Jeff Aclin, and Juan Ortiz, Jim Davis, Virgil Finlay, José Luis García-Lopez and Frank McLaughlin, Jaime Hernandez, Frank Robbins, Al Williamson and many more...
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The World of Gianni Versace Photo Richard Avedon Illustrations Antonio Lopez Models Bonnie Berman, Kelly LeBrock, Kim Alexis, Mike Hall & Tim Clement
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Tim. Oil on canvas. 24 X 18. . . #painting #oiloncanvas #sketchbook #oilpainting #illustration #handmade #drawing #instadraw #graphic #color #couleur #colorful #painting #sketch #sketchaday #sketchbook #art #instapainting #visualart #instaart #newcontemporary #body #corps #eyes #yeux #figurepainting #tim #lopez (à Montreal, Quebec) https://www.instagram.com/p/CRkQOzvLxIY/?utm_medium=tumblr
#painting#oiloncanvas#sketchbook#oilpainting#illustration#handmade#drawing#instadraw#graphic#color#couleur#colorful#sketch#sketchaday#art#instapainting#visualart#instaart#newcontemporary#body#corps#eyes#yeux#figurepainting#tim#lopez
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Infinite Frontier #0
Infinite Frontier #0 DC Comics 2021 Written by Brian Michael Bendis, James Tynion IV, Becky Cloonan, Michael W. Conrad Joelle Jones, Tim Sheridan, Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Joshua Williamson, Geoff Johns, Geoffrey Thorne, Scott Snyder Illustrated by David Marquez, Jorge Jimenez, Alitha Martinez, Mark Morales, Joelle Jones Stephen Byrne, Rafa Sandoval, Jordi Tarragona, Jamal Igle, Alex Maleev, Todd Nauck Dexter Soy, Howard Porter, John Romita Jr, Klaus Janson & John Timms Coloured by Tamra Bonvillain, Tomeu Morey, Alex Sinclair, Emilo Lopez, Jordie Bellaire, Stephen Byrne, Alejandro Sanchez, Hi-Fi & Brad Anderson Lettered by ALW’s Troy Peteri The next phase of the DC Universe begins here! Dark Knights: Death Metal presented the darkest threats of the Multiverse. DC Future State revealed what may lie ahead. Now it’s time to look into the Infinite Frontier of the current-day DC Universe. In Gotham City, The Joker jolts citizens awake with an attack even the Dark Knight never expected. In Brazil, a young woman discovers her destiny and her connection to the Amazons. In Belle Reve, Amanda Waller plots an invasion of Arkham Asylum. In the far reaches of space, Mongul dreams of galactic domination, while the Green Lantern Corps hosts a summit of its greatest enemies. At the Hall of Justice, the League joins forces with Black Adam. Beyond the mortal world, Wonder Woman settles into a new role in the godsphere. And somewhere in the DC Universe-it’s the return of Stargirl, in an all-new tale written by Geoff Johns! This oversized, all-star issue kicks off the next great era of storytelling and excitement as top writers and artists reveal what’s next for the World’s Greatest Heroes and opens the door to some of the greatest stories of 2021. Alright so here’s the introduction to next thing in DC Comics. Am I impressed, not terribly and here’s why. We’ve had so many reboots and iterations since the Original Crisis on Infinite Earths and this is an attempt to take aspects of all of them and merge them into one. There are questionable choices being made here, yes my opinion, along with this Quintessence which I guess I supposed to be their version of the omnipotent cosmic tribunal type deal. Is there any good reason Nubia is an angry black woman, Amazon? Sigh the gay Alan Scott is a mistake, again my opinion as I didn’t like that run and with Obsidian around why do both of them have to be gay, asks the gay man. I do like the Birds of Prey reference as Barbara is once again taking the mantle of Oracle. I do like seeing Jade and Obsidian and hope they will be a part of a new JSA series. I’ll reserve judgement on Titans Academy until I see more. There is so much with Jonathan Kent that I don’t agree with but hey it is what it is and that’s he conceived on one earth, born on another and raised on yet another well there’s a lot of convoluting going on there. Oh Green Arrow and Black Canary sigh yes please we need a series starring these two. Happy to see Stargirl again and with the potential of having a long lost group back makes me wonder why no All Star Squadron? That was one of the best series before Crisis and of course I want to see my Freedom Fighters as well so let’s get on those alongside a real Legion of Super-Heroes title. Simon Saint and Scarecrow hmm interesting duo but why does the latter now appear to be a cross between Edward Scissorhands and some crazy medical experiment? I also kind of want Saint to be Simon Dark but that’s my fanboy coming out. The Spectre taking Diana on a tour through the new changes was highly reminiscent of the Kingdom Come journey. I’m not entirely sure how I feel about that either but I guess it was co-opted because it was an easy way to show us all the new changes. By contrast there is one arc that I am looking forward to seeing come to life in its own series and that is with the House of Heroes. Maybe we’ll finally see Captain Carrot get to be part of a team? The interiors here are wonderful as usual. Though I will say th
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DC Comics has revealed the full, creative team for Infinite Frontier #0, which is set to arrive in March
Framing sequence written by Joshua Williamson with James Tynion IV and Scott Snyder, illustrated by John Timms and Alex Sinclair
Justice League by Brian Michael Bendis, David Marquez, and Tamra Bonvillain
Batman by James Tynion IV, Jorge Jiménez, and Tomeu Morey
Wonder Woman by Becky Cloonan & Michael W. Conrad, Alitha Martinez & Mark Morales, Emilio Lopez
Wonder Girl by Joëlle Jones and Jordie Bellaire
Green Lantern: Alan Scott by James Tynion IV and Stephen Byrne
Teen Titans Academy by Tim Sheridan, Rafa Sandoval & Jordi Tarragona, and Alejandro Sanchez
Superman by Phillip Kennedy Johnson, Jamal Igle, and Hi-Fi
Green Arrow & Black Canary by Joshua Williamson, Alex Maleev, and Jordie Bellaire
Stargirl by Geoff Johns, Todd Nauck, and Hi-Fi
Green Lanterns by Geoffrey Thorne, Dexter Soy, and Alex Sinclair
The Flash by Joshua Williamson, Howard Porter, and Hi-Fi
Epilogue by Joshua Williamson, John Romita Jr. & Klaus Janson, Brad Anderson
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The bloodthirsty aswangs of Philippine mythology By Yvette Tan Updated 18:00 PM PHT Thu, July 13, 2017 http://cnnphilippines.com/life/culture/2017/07/13/aswangs-in-pinoy-myths.html
In Philippine myth and folklore, bloodthirsty monsters include a wide array of creatures other than the vampire, from the bebarlang of Mindanao to the supernatural Danag. Illustration by TIM LOPEZ
Manila (CNN Philippines Life) — Mankind has always had its monsters. Many of the earliest stories have been about a culture’s fight against the darkness and the horrors that dwell within the unknown. Today, such beliefs survive in pop culture usually as remnants of a superstitious past, though there are still individuals and communities that believe in such creatures, especially (though not necessarily always) in isolated areas.
Not just Dracula
One of pop culture’s most popular monsters is the vampire. Though Eastern European in origin, it was popularized by Irishman Bram Stoker in his classic book, “Dracula.” Vampires have evolved since its pre-literary days, morphing from a scary, dangerous creature to dashing, well-dressed night dwellers who have the power to bestow the gift of immortality.
The vampire-type creature isn’t just an Eastern European phenomenon. Almost all cultures have their own version of a blood-sucking monster. The Malay penanggalan, for example, is a beautiful female whose head detaches from her body, flying off with her entrails dangling below. She feeds on human flesh and/or blood in almost the same way our manananggal does: by perching on the roof of a house where a child is born and lowering her proboscis-like tongue (basically a built-in bubble tea straw) so that it can suck the entrails out of the mother and child.
CNN Life - Aswang - 5 Manananggal - 170713.jpg The manananggal was made famous in the first “Shake, Rattle, and Roll” through Peque Gallaga’s short of the same name. Illustration by TIM LOPEZ
A more recent bloodsucker is the Mexican chupacabra, which first appeared in the 1990s. It got its name, which literally means ‘goat-sucker,’ because of its penchant for sucking the blood out of livestock, particularly goats.
Roots in nature
The focus on blood is simple: blood is life. The one thing our prehistoric hunter-gatherer ancestors understood was that if you didn’t have blood, you died. If you didn’t have all your internal organs, you died. Another thing they understood was that offal was filled with the nutrients needed to survive a long drought or winter. So it stands to reason that blood and guts is what their most dreaded supernatural enemies would immediately gun for.
Another inspiration is the natural world. There are many fish, birds, insects, and animals that live on the red stuff. We (and our pets) know how painful, annoying, and potentially deadly mosquitoes, fleas, and ticks can be. Birds like the oxpecker eat the insects on the ox they perch on, but they can also drink the blood that flow from the ox’s wounds.
CNN Life - Aswang - 6 Sigbin - 170713.jpg In the Visayas, there is the sigbin, basically a bloodsucking cross between a dog and a kangaroo. Illustration by TIM LOPEZ
Vampire bat saliva have anti-coagulating properties that prevent the blood in their prey’s wounds from clotting so that they can feed on them longer. The lamprey is a leechlike fish that attaches itself to other fish so that it can suck their blood. With horrors like this surrounding our ancestors on a daily basis, it’s no wonder that one of their major preoccupations was keeping their insides intact, thank you very much.
One thing that these monsters play on is the concept of opposites. Since they are essentially the enemies of the forces of good, some of their characteristics are mirror opposites to what is found in nature. It’s kind of the same logic behind the upside-down Christian cross representing Satan as a bastardization of Christianity. It’s why the aswang’s companion tiktik and the ghoulish bebarlang (see below) sound softer the nearer they get.
Related to this is the concept of the other. Many monsters, such as the penanggal and our own manananggal, for example, have human forms, that usually of beautiful maidens or old crones. This was a form of exclusion — a cultural removal of the powerful feminine, the patriarchy’s way of keeping women in check by branding old, outspoken, or even just plain weird ones as dangerous.
CNN Life - Aswang - 3 Bebarlang - 170713.jpg Bebarlang are basically ghouls, monsters who feed on the flesh of the deceased. They also feed on the living by going into a trance and using their astral body to enter the homes of unsuspecting victims. Illustration by TIM LOPEZ
Filipino bloodsuckers
In the Philippines, we don’t have bloodsuckers so much as what folklore authority Maximo Ramos calls viscera suckers. That is, your friendly neighborhood monster isn’t just going to drink your blood. It’s going to suck up all your juicy, nutritious innards with its straw-like tongue, too. These monsters are generally grouped into the category of “aswang.” Contrary to popular belief, not all of our folklore come from before Spanish colonization. Some of them, such as the kapre and other kinds of aswangs, appeared in the World War II era as word-of-mouth propaganda to scare away the enemy.
There are many kinds of aswangs. Here are some of them:
Danag — One of the aswang creation myths involve the Danag, a supernatural race that lived side by side with humans in the old days. Legend is a human got a wooden splinter caught underneath his fingernail one day and a Danag offered to help by sucking it out. A bit of blood accompanied the splinter as it exited the nail, an iron taste which the Danag took a liking to. Since then the Danag have become aswangs, subsisting on delicious, delicious blood.
CNN Life - Aswang - 2 Danag - 170713.jpg The Danag was believed to be a supernatural race that took a liking to human blood. Illustration by TIM LOPEZ
Bebarlang — Tales of Mindanao’s bebarlang hail from before WWII. They’re basically ghouls, monsters who can be found in graveyards feeding on the flesh of the deceased. When there aren’t enough dead, they feed on the living by going into a trance and using their astral body to enter the homes of unsuspecting victims to feast on their entrails. How the physical entrails get carried through the astral aswang bodies is never explained.
Mandurugo — The mandurugo is the Filipino version of the black widow. Stories tell of a beautiful woman who married a man, who shortly after, passed away mysteriously. Her being beautiful, and beauty being the only thing needed to make a woman desirable back then, it wasn’t long before she found herself another husband. Unfortunately, it also wasn’t long until he too died under mysterious circumstances. The woman married again, but the same thing kept happening until the last man she married, afraid that the same fate would befall him, took a knife with him when they went to bed. When he felt pinpricks on his neck that drew blood, he plunged the knife into his assailant. When he woke the next day, he found his wife dead.
CNN Life - Aswang - 4 Mandurugo - 170713.jpg The mandurugo takes the form of a desirable woman who preys on one man after the other. Illustration by TIM LOPEZ
Manananggal — The manananggal was made famous in the first “Shake, Rattle, and Roll” (SSR) through Peque Gallaga’s short of the same name. The manananggal is usually a woman (though Miguel Rodriguez played one in “SRR” as well). At night, she grows wings, separates her torso from the lower half of her body and flies off in search of a meal. She prefers heavily pregnant women whose nutrient-rich fetuses she can suck out like a raw egg. The manananggal is sometimes accompanied by a tiktik, a small bird named for the sound it makes. As mentioned above, the louder it is means the further it is, and the more silent, the nearer it is.
Sigbin — In the Visayas, there is the sigbin, basically a bloodsucking cross between a dog and a kangaroo. These cryptids are said to be most powerful during Good Friday, where they are said to hunt for the hearts of young children that they make into amulets. They are said to be aswang familiars and may have been a folkloric interpretation of an actual animal, possibly the cat-fox.
#tags preserved for commentary of OP#aswangs#Philippine mythology#By Yvette Tan#Illustrations by TIM LOPEZ#penanggalan#manananggal#chupacabra#goat-sucker#sigbin#lamprey#bebarlang#Philippines#kapre#Danag#Mandurugo#Filipino#vampire#mythology#folklore
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(via Artist Alley (2019) | Camden Comic Con 2019)
ARTIST ALLEY (2019)
3 Heads Productions (Vampires in NJ)
Alex Dos Diaz
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Chocolate Nation Studios
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Emily K. & Spratty Lin @spratty-duck
FinianInWonderland
Glowmania
Idrambol Press
K. Hidalgo
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Kivadeno Customs
Lauren Elizabeth Art
Leah Mena @idrawprettyboys
LENNYMUD
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X-Men Black: Emma Frost #1 “Hunger is Productive”
Writer: Leah Williams | Penciller: Chris Bachalo | Inkers: Bachalo, Wayne Faucher, Al Vey, John Livesay, Tim Townsend, Jamie Mendoza | Colourists: Bachalo, Antonio Fabela, Dan Brown, Carlos Lopez | Letterer: Cory Petit
Published by Marvel | 31.10.2018 | $4.99
X-Men Black: Emma Frost #1 is the final of these one-shots, giving us a story that plays out as a revenge move from Emma Frost against the Hellfire Club, with the assistance of a number of X-Men.
Leah Williams’ take on Emma Frost feels dead on. No nonsense, confident, and able to take on any and all comers through a focused, detailed, and well thought out plan of attack. I really, really like this characterization and it feels like the “real” Emma, much more so than the weirdly emotional, outright villainous, mad cackling character that we’ve seen a few times since her seeming departure from sanity in Death of X.
The artwork from Chris Bachalo and the entire art team army for this story is also very impressive. There are nice touches of humour and action throughout as Emma and her X-assistants enact her plan.
I’m still confused by the overall intent and purpose of the X-Men Black series of one-shots. It’s largely delivered an entertaining bunch of comics focusing on X-Men villains (or antagonists, as it were), but there doesn’t seem to be a wholly unified purpose to them. Some of the promotional material promised that the one-shots would lead into Uncanny X-Men, but there’s no real direct link hinted at so far. There’s been forward momentum for this Emma Frost book, as well as last week’s Juggernaut, but, by and large, most of these haven’t really been overly steeped in current continuity and don’t really muck about with the status quo too much. This is the first of the five that really set out with a clear set up for future stories and a new situation that will definitely have broader implications for the X-Men as a whole, but there are no indications as to how this might possibly be capitalized upon in the future.
It’s also still unclear whether or not Emma has definitively become a villain again, as she’s been mostly depicted as since Cyclops’ death in Death of X, or if she’s found a new purpose. Though, there’s definitely an indication that she’ll still be at odds with the X-Men for what she’s done in this story.
Overall, though, like the previous instalments, this is a highly entertaining story in its own right, worth it for both Williams’ characterization of Emma and for Bachalo & his army of inkers and colourists’ wonderful art.
“Apocalypse - Degeneration Conclusion”
Writers: Zac Thompson & Lonnie Nadler | Artist: Geraldo Borges | Colourist: Rachelle Rosenberg | Letterer: Cory Petit
This is the fifth and final chapter of this Apocalypse back-up, seeing him regenerate into a new body and figuring out what exactly was going on in this strange world he found himself in.
I find it interesting that Apocalypse has learned something through this entire ordeal, but it’s not what we’d naturally think. Most people having been humbled and brought to their lowest point often develop a feeling of empathy. Not so here, as Apocalypse is possibly even more ruthless than before.
Zac Thompson, Lonnie Nadler, Geraldo Borges, Rachelle Rosenberg, and Cory Petit have given us a fairly entertaining serial through the back-ups and delivered a rejuvenated Apocalypse to the world of the X-Men. I wonder where it’s going to go from here.
Quick Bits:
Extermination #4 takes a moment amidst the chaos and gives the explanation for what kid Cable and Ahab have been doing. In doing so, Ed Brisson also nicely raises the stakes to make you wonder how the X-Men can possibly get themselves out of the situation. Might well be one of the reasons why the forthcoming Uncanny X-Men arc is being called “Disassembled”. Great art from Pepe Larraz, Ario Anindito, Dexter Vines, and Erick Arciniega. Anindito’s work isn’t necessarily as “clean” as Larraz’s, but the grittiness works for this chapter, and isn’t necessarily a dramatic shift in style or tone.
Multiple Man #5 does its damnedest to break your brain with multiple multiples, multiple timelines, and multiple instances of time travel shenanigans. It’s fun. Kind of insane, but fun. Matthew Rosenberg, Andy MacDonald, Tamra Bonvillain, and Travis Lanham have done a good job with this series, bringing Multiple Man back to the world of the X-Men. And then killing him again. Multiple times.
Old Man Logan #50 is one hell of a conclusion, as Logan takes one last stab at taking down the Maestro. The final battle between Logan and Maestro is brutal, this issue beautifully illustrated by Ibraim Roberson, Neil Edwards, and Carlos Lopez.
What If...Magik #1 is a pretty great story from Leah Williams, Filipe Andrade, Chris O’Halloran, and Clayton Cowles, presenting “What if Magik became Sorcerer Supreme?” It’s an interesting twist from the Darkchylde character arc, giving Illyana a chance at redemption and a healthier outlook on magic and herself with the help of Doctor Strange. Also, the art from Andrade and O’Halloran are pretty much worth it on its own.
Collections: Weapon H - Volume 1: AWOL, Weapon X - Volume 4: Russian Revolution, X-Men Blue - Volume 5: Surviving the Experience, X-Men: Grand Design - Second Genesis
d. emerson eddy is ahead. Is a man. Is the first mammal to wear pants, yeah.
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Những mỹ nhân Hollywood U60 vẫn ‘trông mòn con mắt’ -
Dù đã ngoài 50, những người đẹp hack tuổi vẫn trẻ trung, có thân hình bốc lửa nhờ chế độ ăn và tập luyện đều đặn.
Jennifer Lopez , 51 tuổi
Nhiều người nghi ngờ Jennifer Lopez đã thẩm mỹ để có vẻ trẻ trung như vậy ở tuổi ngoài 50. Tuy nhiên, nữ ca sĩ bốc lửa khẳng định gương mặt và vóc dáng của cô hoàn toàn tự nhiên, hoàn toàn không tiêm botox hay phẫu thuật.
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JLo rất năng động, có lẽ đó là bí quyết để cô giữ vẻ ngoài trẻ trung. Trước buổi biểu diễn, cô luôn dành nhiều giờ tập luyện, tập thể thao với các huấn luyện viên và chuyên gia tim mạch riêng. Cô không uống rượu, cà phê, thay vào đó nạp nhiều protein nạc (lean protein) như cá hồi và thịt bò. Lopez cũng rất thích thực phẩm chức năng. Gần đây, nữ ca sĩ chia sẻ cô uống collagen hàng ngày để có “vẻ đẹp từ trong ra ngoài”.
Halle Berry , 54 tuổi
Tập gym là bí quyết giữ dáng của Halle Berry , thậm chí cô còn tập các bài rất khó và nặng. Nữ diễn viên thường kết hợp các bài tập sức mạnh, tim mạch, yoga và giãn cơ. “Đối với tôi, quan trọng là không được để cơ thể mình quá sức”, Berry nói. Cô đã làm việc với huấn luyện viên nổi tiếng Peter Lee Thomas 5 năm, họ cùng nhau xây dựng một nền tảng chăm sóc sức khỏe hướng dẫn tập luyện và chế độ dinh dưỡng. Theo Halle Berry, đây là nơi mọi người có thể trở nên khỏe mạnh và thon gọn mà không nhất thiết phải đến phòng gym.
Halle Berry đưa lời khuyên: “Bạn phải vận động mỗi ngày và có tương tác với cơ thể để cảm thấy mình còn sống, ngay cả khi đó không phải là bài tập nặng. Nếu bạn thiền, bạn đang chuyển động trong chính mình. Bạn chuyển động tinh thần của mình, bạn chuyển động năng lượng bên trong cơ thể. Nếu bạn đọc sách, nó cũng là chuyển động vì nó kích hoạt bộ não, kích thích trí tưởng tượng và di chuyển ngay trong tâm trí bạn”.
Paulina Porizkova , 56 tuổi
Cựu người mẫu áo tắm của tạp chí Sports Illustrated là minh chứng của vẻ đẹp không có giới hạn tuổi tác. Thân hình hoàn hảo với từng rãnh cơ hằn sâu, làn da tươi trẻ không nhăn nheo, chảy xệ là điều nhiều người mơ ước ở độ tuổi của cô. Trông người mẫu Czech trẻ hơn một nửa so với tuổi thật của mình. Đến nay, Porizkova vẫn duy trì tập 3 – 5 buổi mỗi tuần. Để bảo vệ làn da tươi trẻ, cô sử dụng các loại thiết bị đắt tiền tác động bên ngoài mà không cần phẫu thuật.
Demi Moore, 58 tuổi
Ở tuổi U60, Demi Moore vẫn chụp ảnh khỏa thân cho tạp chí và đăng ảnh bikini lên Instagram. Để có sự tự tin này, Moore đã phải trải qua nỗi cực khổ để giữ dáng từ khi còn trẻ. Trong cuốn hồi ký Inside Out (2019), nữ diễn viên kể trải nghiệm bị body shaming khi còn là một diễn viên trẻ, cũng như áp lực, “nỗi đau và sự tra tấn” cô phải chịu đựng để giữ dáng. “Tôi phải cắt giảm carb, chạy và đạp xe . Tôi tập luyện trên mọi cỗ máy có thể”, cô viết trong hồi ký.
Năm 2019, Demi Moore tiết lộ với Harpers Bazaar rằng đã dừng tập nặng 4 năm, thay bằng các bài tập nhẹ nhàng cho khớp nhưng vẫn đủ để tăng cường sức khỏe và giữ dáng.
Elizabeth Hurley , 56 tuổi
Hurley rất thích mặc gợi cảm. Cô không có lý do gì để giấu đi cơ thể của mình, đặc biệt là khi có vẻ ngoài tuyệt vời như thế này. Chia sẻ với E!, nữ diễn viên kiêm người mẫu cho biết cô loại bỏ thói quen ăn vặt vào đêm muộn: “Hãy ăn sớm để thức ăn có nhiều thời gian tiêu hóa và cơ thể được nghỉ ngơi trong lúc ngủ. Tôi không đến phòng gym nhưng vẫn rất năng động, không bao giờ ngồi im hay nằm dài một chỗ trên sofa”. Buổi sáng, cô thường uống một cốc nước ấm để tốt cho hệ tiêu hóa.
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ACTION COMICS #1000 Cover by JIM LEE and SCOTT WILLIAMS Stories and art by an all-star lineup of top talent Retailers: This issue will ship with ten covers. Please see the order form for details. Celebrate 1000 issues of Action Comics with an all-star lineup of top talent as they pay tribute to the comic that started it all! From today’s explosive action to a previously unpublished tale illustrated by the legendary Curt Swan to the Man of Tomorrow’s future—this very special, oversized issue presents the best of the best in Superman stories!
FEATURING ALL-NEW ART AND STORIES BY: BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS JOHN CASSADAY OLIVIER COIPEL PAUL DINI JOSE LUIS GARCIA-LOPEZ PATRICK GLEASON BUTCH GUICE GEOFF JOHNS DAN JURGENS TOM KING JIM LEE CLAY MANN BRAD MELTZER JERRY ORDWAY TIM SALE LOUISE SIMONSON SCOTT SNYDER CURT SWAN PETER J. TOMASI MARV WOLFMAN
...AND MORE! DECADES-SPANNING OPEN-TO-ORDER VARIANT COVERS BY: • STEVE RUDE (1930s) • MICHAEL CHO (1940s) • DAVE GIBBONS (1950s) • MICHAEL ALLRED (1960s) • JIM STERANKO (1970s) • JOSHUA MIDDLETON (1980s) • DAN JURGENS (1990s) • LEE BERMEJO (2000s)
...PLUS A BLANK VARIANT COVER!
PRESTIGE FORMAT • NO ADS • On sale APRIL 18 • 80 pg, FC, $7.99 US • RATED T
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ACTION COMICS #1000
Celebrate 1000 issues of Action Comics with an all-star lineup of top talent as they pay tribute to the comic that started it all! From today's explosive action to a previously unpublished tale illustrated by the legendary Curt Swan to the Man of Tomorrow's future-this very special, oversized issue presents the best of the best in Superman stories! FEATURING ALL-NEW ART AND STORIES BY: • BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS • JOHN CASSADAY • OLIVIER COIPEL • PAUL DINI • JOSE LUIS GARCIA-LOPEZ • PATRICK GLEASON • BUTCH GUICE • GEOFF JOHNS • DAN JURGENS • TOM KING • JIM LEE • CLAY MANN • BRAD MELTZER • JERRY ORDWAY • TIM SALE • LOUISE SIMONSON • SCOTT SNYDER • CURT SWAN • PETER J. TOMASI • MARV WOLFMAN ...AND MORE! DECADES-SPANNING OPEN-TO-ORDER VARIANT COVERS BY: • STEVE RUDE (1930s) • MICHAEL CHO (1940s) • DAVE GIBBONS (1950s) • MICHAEL ALLRED (1960s) • JIM STERANKO (1970s) • JOSHUA MIDDLETON (1980s) • DAN JURGENS (1990s) • LEE BERMEJO (2000s) ...PLUS A BLANK VARIANT COVER!
Available at Lobo Comics & Toys this coming Wednesday, 04/18/2018
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#action comics#superman#superman action comics#dc#dc comics#dc universe#dcu#lobo comics and toys#lobo comics#lobo#albuquerque#comic shop in albuquerque#albuquerque comic con#new mexico#comic shop in new mexico#comic store in new mexico#comics#comic#toys
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The World of Gianni Versace Photo Richard Avedon Illustrations Antonio Lopez Models Bonnie Berman, Kelly LeBrock, Kim Alexis, Mike Hall & Tim Clement
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Tim. Oil on canvas. 24 X 18. . . #painting #oiloncanvas #sketchbook #oilpainting #illustration #handmade #drawing #instadraw #graphic #color #couleur #colorful #painting #sketch #sketchaday #sketchbook #art #instapainting #visualart #instaart #newcontemporary #body #corps #eyes #yeux #figurepainting #tim #lopez (à Montreal, Quebec) https://www.instagram.com/p/CRkQOzvLxIY/?utm_medium=tumblr
#painting#oiloncanvas#sketchbook#oilpainting#illustration#handmade#drawing#instadraw#graphic#color#couleur#colorful#sketch#sketchaday#art#instapainting#visualart#instaart#newcontemporary#body#corps#eyes#yeux#figurepainting#tim#lopez
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80 years in the making and coming to Fantasy Comics @fantasycomics this Wednesday!Celebrate 1000 issues of Action Comics with an all-star lineup of top talent as they pay tribute to the comic that started it all! From today's explosive action to a previously unpublished tale illustrated by the legendary Curt Swan to the Man of Tomorrow's future-this very special, oversized issue presents the best of the best in Superman stories! FEATURING ALL-NEW ART AND STORIES BY: • BRIAN MICHAEL BENDIS • JOHN CASSADAY • OLIVIER COIPEL • PAUL DINI • JOSE LUIS GARCIA-LOPEZ • PATRICK GLEASON • BUTCH GUICE • GEOFF JOHNS • DAN JURGENS • TOM KING • JIM LEE • CLAY MANN • BRAD MELTZER • JERRY ORDWAY • TIM SALE • LOUISE SIMONSON • SCOTT SNYDER • CURT SWAN • PETER J. TOMASI • MARV WOLFMAN ...AND MORE! DECADES-SPANNING OPEN-TO-ORDER VARIANT COVERS BY: • STEVE RUDE (1930s) • MICHAEL CHO (1940s) • DAVE GIBBONS (1950s) • MICHAEL ALLRED (1960s) • JIM STERANKO (1970s) • JOSHUA MIDDLETON (1980s) • DAN JURGENS (1990s) • LEE BERMEJO (2000s) ...PLUS A BLANK VARIANT COVER! (at Fantasy Comics Tucson Arizona)
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