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#kitchen sink comix
holy-shit-comics · 2 years
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cryptocollectibles · 1 year
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The Crow Waking Nightmares #1 (January 1997) by Kitchen Sink
Written by Christopher Golden, drawn by Phil Hester, cover by Miran Kim. 
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thefugitivesaint · 2 years
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Brian Biggs, 'Cut Up', ''Death Rattle'', Vol. 3, #1 & #2, 1995
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weirdlookindog · 2 years
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Death Rattle #1 - Kitchen Sink, 1972. Cover art by Richard Corben.
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allflooby · 4 months
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eBay purchase: Gay Comix 1 (cover by Rand Holmes) and Gay Comix 2 (cover by Howard Cruse).
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dduane · 1 month
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In memoriam: Trina Robbins
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Some thoughts about this at Bleeding Cool. Among others:
Born in 1938, Robbins was an active member of sci-fi fandom in the fifties and sixties, with illustrations appearing in fanzines. She ran an East Village clothing boutique called Broccoli from 1966 and made clothes for Mama Cass, Donovan, David Crosby and more. Involved in the music scene, she was  a friend of Jim Morrison and of The Byrds and was the first of the three Ladies of the Canyon immortalised in Joni Mitchell's song. Trina wears her wampum beads She fills her drawing book with line Sewing lace on widows' weeds And filigree on leaf and vine Vine and leaf are filigree And her coat's a secondhand one Trimmed with antique luxury She is a lady of the canyon Trina takes her paints and her threads And she weaves a pattern all her own But Trina Robbins was also creating comics while working at that clothes store, which included designing the infamous costume for Vampirella for Frank Frazetta for Vampirella #1 in 1969. In 1970, she started work in San Francisco at the feminist underground newspaper It Ain't Me, Babe, from which she span off the one-shot It Ain't Me, Babe Comix with Barbara Mendes, the first all-woman comic book. This led to Wimmen's Comix which ran for twenty years, as well as leading to Trina's Women for Kitchen Sink. Her first strip for Wimmen's Comix, Sandy Comes Out, was the first comic strip to feature a stated lesbian character.
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geekynerfherder · 2 years
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'Iris Shaw' by Alex Maleev.
Cover art for the graphic novel 'The Crow: Flesh & Blood', written by James Vance and illustrated by Alex Maleev, published in 1996 by Kitchen Sink Comix.
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fredseibertdotcom · 29 days
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We was chocolate before chocolate was cool. 
It was a great idea, before its time. Oh, and I didn’t exactly know what I was doing. 
The late 1990s and early 2000s saw me straying into some areas that were a result of my arrogance and ignorance. I haven’t written yet about my short, disastrous foray into comic book publishing, but it led into a fun, but equally calamitous venture. Chocolate bars. 
Long story, short, in 1997 I put together a few people to invest to save storied, but troubled underground comix publisher Kitchen Sink Press, founded in Princeton, Wisconsin, but relocated in Northampton, Massachusetts. In addition to comics, the company put out all sorts of artist tangential products like trading cards, cloisonne pins, and my favorite and their best selling product, R. Crumb Devil Girl Choco(late) Bars.  When it was clear that KSP was going to continue being a black hole of financial losses it shut down. Clearly, I had no idea how to usefully help the company, and my living in Los Angeles with the company 2,920 miles away didn’t help one bit. 
I’d lost a lot of money, including my wife’s savings and my kid’s college fund, and I really wanted to earn it back for my family’s sake. Fast forward, I did, but certainly not in the KSP spin off I conceived. 
For reasons best sorted out with a therapist, I love everyday objects that have cool images printed on them. Skateboards, T-shirts, posters, you get the idea. So the fact that chocolate bars are obsessions of a lot of people, no matter their age, gender, location, and the R.Crumb and Fabulous Freak Brothers bars being a hit that I felt KSP had ignored in their plight, I got the bright idea of partnering with a Massachusetts based KSP consultant to launch a company named True Confections, solely in the business of boxes of chocolate bars with cool images printed on them.  Can’t go wrong, right? 
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As I write this post in 2024, it’s pretty common to find “cool” candy bars in gourmet markets around the country. But, that wasn’t the case in the 00′s. We came up with some pretty neat designs (a few of them above), and our sales team did pretty well too. We sold pretty successfully everywhere from Toys’R’Us to Home Depot to my local Santa Monica pharmacy (they could keep Devil Girl’s in stock!). But, we didn’t know how to source the bars with good chocolate at a good price, and of course, we had no idea how to ship the candy properly when the weather turned hot. Long story short, True Confections was eating money faster than KSP was, and honestly, I got sick of eating chocolate myself. 
It was fun while it lasted, but like I said up above, we were ahead of our time. 
And, as I’ve learned, over and over, a great idea is all well and good, but if you can’t execute... well, that’s that. 
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hippycomix · 4 months
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Empire Comic Fest is pleased to welcome back writer, editor, and publisher Dan Fogel! Beginning in the late '80s with creator Larry Welz's best-selling line of Adult comix starring CHERRY, Dan’s stories published by Last Gasp, Kitchen Sink Press, Tundra, and Slave Labor Graphics had multiple printings and foreign translations. As a publisher Dan’s produced dozens of books with scores of creators spanning Robert Crumb to Neil Gaiman. A leading authority and historian of Underground, Alternative, and Independent comic books, Dan’s currently working on V.5 of FOGEL'S UNDERGROUND COMIX PRICE GUIDE, since 2006 the industry standard for retailers, collectors, and investors.
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THE INDIGENOUS-AMERICANA STYLINGS OF THE DEAD -- A CULT STATE OF MIND.
PIC INFO: Resolution at 1280x1648 -- Spotlight on the roots imagery of an American cultural institution -- Cover art to "Grateful Dead Comix" Vol. 1? #3, c. 1991. Published by Kitchen Sink Press. Artwork by Tim Truman.
"Leaving Texas, Fourth day of July, Sun so hot, clouds so low, The eagles filled the sky.
Catch the Detroit Lightning out of Santa Fe, Great Northern out of Cheyenne, From sea to shining sea."
-- "Jack Straw" (1972) by GRATEFUL DEAD
Source: www.reddit.com/r/gratefuldead/comments/1w1nf0.
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holy-shit-comics · 2 years
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cryptocollectibles · 1 year
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Steve Canyon in 3-D #1 (1986) Kitchen Sink Comix
Written and drawn by Milton Caniff.
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muspeccoll · 1 year
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From the classroom last week: Twisted Sisters Comics, an anthology edited by Diane Noomin. Noomin originally became involved in the underground comics movement through Wimmen's Comix, a feminist collective that published a comics anthology through Last Gasp Press. Noomin and Aline Kominsky-Crumb left Wimmen's Comix in 1975 to publish Twisted Sisters, which was revived in the early 1990s by Kitchen Sink Press. We had this item out for a class on feminist art on Friday.
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balu8 · 2 years
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Xenozoic Tales #3: Benefactor
by Mark Schultz
Kitchen Sink Comix
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nermal · 1 year
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reading kitchen sink’s gay comix from the 80s. a good handful of strips have themes of “gay men and lesbians dont get along” or “lesbians hate gay men” and it makes me really sad. we shuld all be united together... i know its probably also because these are a bit older, but i still see this sentiment today 
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screamingreek · 1 year
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Melting Pot - Books 1 & 2 Kitchen Sink Comix
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Melting Pot - Book 1 (December 1993) & Book 2 (February 1994) Kitchen Sink Comix By Simon Bisley, Kevin Eastman, Eric Talbot Pre-Owned - Modern Age Comics - 2 books out of a 4 part mini-series Both issues are Very Fine/Near Mint 9.0 I am NOT a professional grader! I use "The Overstreet Guide To Grading Comics" as a reference. The grades I give are my opinion. What you see is what you get! So, please take the time to check out the pics in the item gallery. Feel free to contact me if you have any questions, comments, or offers: [email protected] Read the full article
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