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Batman Logo Evolution 2
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1941’s Batman with Robin The Boy Wonder Comic Book by Detective Comics
The character of Batman made his first appearance in the pages of Detective Comics #27 in May 1939. In Spring of 1940, Batman #1 was published and introduced new characters into Batman's pantheon.
<a>href='http://https://samschaeffer11.wordpress.com/2012/11/27/batman-logo/' >Click here for where I had gotten the picture.</a> -
1965’s Batman Comic Book by DC Comics
Click here for where I had gotten the picture.In 1964, Julius Schwartz was made responsible for reviving the faded Batman titles. He jettisoned the sillier aspects that had crept into the series such as Ace the Bathound and Bat-Mite and gave the character a "New Look" that premiered in Detective Comics #327 (May 1964).[14][15] Schwartz's first issue of the Batman title was #164 (June 1964).[16] The Riddler returned after an eighteen-year absence in #171 (May 1965).[17] Among the new villains introduced during this period was Poison Ivy in #181 (June 1966).[18] In the 1960s, Batman comics were affected by the popular Batman television series, with campy stories based on the tongue-in-cheek premise of the series. -
1966’s Batman TV Show by Adam West and Burt Ward
Click here for where I had gotten the picture.Among the new villains introduced during this period was Poison Ivy in #181 (June 1966).[18] In the 1960s, Batman comics were affected by the popular Batman television series, with campy stories based on the tongue-in-cheek premise of the series. After the Batman television program's influence had died down, writer Frank Robbins and artist Irv Novick sent Dick Grayson off to attend college and moved Batman out of Wayne Manor in issue #217 (December 1969).[19]batman-logo/ -
1986’s The Dark Knight Returns Comic Book by Frank Miller
Click here for where I had gotten the picture.Moench's longtime collaborator, artist Paul Gulacy made his DC Comics debut with a two-part story in issues #393 and #394.[37][38] The title reached its 400th issue in October 1986 and featured work by several popular comics artists and included an introduction by novelist Stephen King -
1989’s Batman film by Tim Burton and Michael Keaton
Click here for where I had gotten the picture.The kill option won by a narrow majority, and the following month the character was shown dying from wounds inflicted in the previous issue's cliffhanger. The story, entitled "A Death in the Family," received high media exposure due to the shocking nature in which a familiar character's life had ended.[45] Writer Marv Wolfman and artist Pat Broderick created Tim Drake in issue #436 in the "Batman: Year Three" story[46] and the character became the third version of Robin in the "A Lonely Place of Dying" storyline culminating in issue #442.[47] -
1993’s Nightfall DC Comics by Doug Moench and Jim aparo
Click for where I had gotten the picture.Partially impacted by the tone of Tim Burton's 1989 film Batman, the comics of the 1990s took a darker tone. The Tim Drake version of Robin was given a new costume designed by Neal Adams in issue #457 (December 1990) in a story by Alan Grant and Norm Breyfogle.[48] The main writers of the Batman franchise in the 1990s were Grant, Doug Moench,[35] and Chuck Dixon. Moench and Dixon masterminded the Knightfall crossover arc, which saw Batman's back being broken by the super strong villain Bane.[49] A new character, Jean-Paul Valley, takes up the Batman mantle in Bruce Wayne's absence. Valley is driven mad with power, and Wayne forcefully reclaims it after his recovery. -
1999’s Batman Beyond animated series by Warner Brothers
Click here for where I had gotten the picture.The Batman titles in 1999 were dominated by the large crossover "No Man's Land", which sees Gotham City ravaged by a large earthquake, leading to the U.S. government's order to evacuate the city and abandoning and isolating those who choose to remain behind.https://samschaeffer11.wordpress.com/2012/11/27/batman-logo/ -
2005’s Batman Begins film by Christopher Nolan and Christian Bale
Click here for where I had gotten the picture.Writer Jeph Loeb and artist Jim Lee crafted a year-long story which began with issue #608,[60] The "Hush" storyline was a murder mystery that delved through numerous periods in Batman's history. Introducing a new character that was the story's namesake, as well as redefining the Riddler, healing Harvey Dent, and calling into question the events surrounding Jason Todd's death, Following the conclusion of Hush, the creative team of the Vertigo series 100 Bullets came aboard for a six-issue arc titled "Broken City".[61] Writer Judd Winick became the ongoing writer for the series and in a story titled "Under the Hood", explained that Jason Todd had actually returned from the dead long ago, and became an anti-hero in Gotham under the guise of the Red Hood.[62]After the Infinite Crisis series, all the regular monthly titles of the DC Universe jumped forward in time by one year, depicting the characters in radically different situations and environments then they were in the preceding issues. "Face the Face", was written by James Robinson and saw Batman returning from a year-long overseas journey that retraced the steps he took after initially leaving Gotham City in his youth and featured the return of James Gordon to the role of Gotham City Police Commissioner.[63] -
Future Batman Logo
I drew this and took a picture using photobooth. I designed it after the
1965's Batman Logo. I thinned its middle and made it arrow dynamic like a boomerang. It has the wide wing span and glowing eyes of the 1970-2000 models.This might be sufficient for a weapon and, overall, it looks like something Batman would use.