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  2. Enforcers (comics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enforcers_(comics)

    The Enforcers first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #10 (March 1964), and were created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist and co-plotter Steve Ditko. [1] [2]The Enforcers appear often in the early issues of The Amazing Spider-Man, debuting in #10, [3] and returning in #14 and 19, in the latter issue teaming with the supervillain the Sandman.

  3. Mike Esposito (comics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mike_Esposito_(comics)

    Among his final Spider-Man work, he was co-inker on the story "Moving Up", penciled by Alex Saviuk, in Web of Spider-Man #38 (May 1988); inker of the following issue's cover; and inker of the 11-page partial origin retelling "My Science Project", penciled by Bagley, in The Amazing Spider-Man Annual #23 (1989). His final Spider-Man story was ...

  4. Mark Bagley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mark_Bagley

    Bagley's long and successful run on Ultimate Spider-Man earned him recognition in Wizard magazine's top ten artists of the 2000s in Wizard #219. Ranked #2 on the list, article writer Mark Allen Haverty noted of Bagley, "no other artist came close to the number of comics Bagley sold [in the 2000s], nor the number of Top 20 comics he was a part of."

  5. J. Scott Campbell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Scott_Campbell

    Between 2001 and 2013 Campbell did numerous covers for The Amazing Spider-Man, including issues 30 - 35 in 2001, 50 - 52 and 500 in 2003, and seven issues done sporadically from issues 601 in 2009 and 700 in 2013. His cover to issue #30 was used as the cover of the 2003 trade paperback that collected issues 30 and 31.

  6. Peter Parker: Spider-Man - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Parker:_Spider-Man

    Peter Parker: Spider-Man (originally titled simply Spider-Man), was a monthly comic book series published by Marvel Comics that ran for 98 issues from 1990 to 1998.The series was retitled from Spider-Man with issue #75, but only on the covers; the series was still under its original Spider-Man title in the comic's legal indicia, printed on the title page, from #75–98; the comic book would ...

  7. Torment (comics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torment_(comics)

    McFarlane had been the artist for The Amazing Spider-Man for a long time, and it was for Spider-Man #1 that McFarlane moved to be the artist and the writer, even though "the itch, the creative itch, of writing at the point wasn't so much that I wanted to be a writer. Because to me, I just wanted to draw. It was being in control of what I was ...

  8. Prowler (Marvel Comics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prowler_(Marvel_Comics)

    The second version first appeared in Peter Parker, The Spectacular Spider-Man #47 (October 1980), and was created by Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko. The third version, Rick Lawson, first appeared in The Sensational Spider-Man #16 (May 1997) and was created by writer Todd DeZago and artist Mike Wieringo.

  9. Steve Ditko - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steve_Ditko

    In fact, the only drawings of Spider-Man were on the splash [i.e., page 1] and at the end [where] Kirby had the guy leaping at you with a web gun... Anyway, the first five pages took place in the home, and the kid finds a ring and turns into Spider-Man." [35] Ditko also recalled that, "One of the first things I did was to work up a costume. A ...