The concept of legendary artist Sheldon Moldoff, This Magazine is Haunted was publisher Fawcett's debut entry into comic book horror The title lasted for 14 issues there from 1951 to 1953 and was sold by Fawcett to Charlton in 1953 along with much of the rest of their non-Captain Marvel comic book line. Legendary creator[...]
Sheldon Moldoff Archives
Quality Comics series Hit Comics is primarily remembered for a number of fantastic covers by the legendary Lou Fine, such as the iconic Hit Comics #5 cover, plus others from the likes of Reed Crandall and Gill Fox. With such a shock and awe beginning to this Golden Age series, collectors sometimes overlook the 1942[...]
A comic book including work by three comic book legends in Sheldon Moldoff, Alex Schomburg and Frank Frazetta? Sign me up. The hidden gem in question is Black Terror #22, a March 1948 cover-dated classic from Ned Pines' Standard/Better/Nedor This issue features a "Xela" cover by Schomburg, a Black Terror science fiction story by Moldoff,[...]
Any ideas?
Jeph Loeb – Co-creator of modern Calendar Man.
Al Milgrom – co-creator of the second Thinker
Frank Miller – creator of Corto Maltese
Sheldon Moldoff – co-creator of Polka-Dot Man and Calendar Man.
Jimmy Palmiotti – developer of the current version of Harley Quinn
Tim Sale – Co-creator of modern Calendar Man.
Mike Sekowsky – co-creator of Javelin, co-creator of Starro The Conqueror.
Gail[...]
It's not the first appearance of Shiera Sanders (Flash Comics #1, late 1939), and it's arguably not the first 'official' appearance of Sanders as Hawkgirl (Flash Comics #24, later in 1941), but what this does have is Shiera putting on the hawk costume and wings, and taking part in an adventure by Gardner Fox and Sheldon[...]
The comic book which has a November 1939 cover date and hit the newsstand at the end of September, shows Batman's origin for the first time in a story by Bill Finger, Bob Kane, and Sheldon Moldoff.
There are currently three copies graded CGC 8.0 on the CGC Census, two copies in 9.0, and the sole highest-graded[...]
So to protect his secret identity without having to leave him out of the fight… Batman decided he would wear various bright colored version of his costume to confuse and distract the criminals, making them focus on his new suits rather than the Boy Wonder.
The art here was done by Sheldon Moldoff.
Last year DC Collectibles[...]