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Lynn varley comic artist cadette

          Particularly should acknowledge Lynn Varley's colors on the book, because damn.

        1. Today, we look at when Frank Miller's Batman work first became a distinct influence on other Batman comic books.
        2. By Frank Miller and Lynn Varley, Dark Horse Comics (US), We3 by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely, DC Comics / Vertigo (US), (Via Karen Green.
        3. With similar abandon, Miller tackled the original “Dark Knight” (which he worked on with the artists Klaus Janson and Lynn Varley, then his wife).
        4. Batman: The Dark Knight Strikes By Frank Miller, Lynn Varley (Illustrator).
        5. By Frank Miller and Lynn Varley, Dark Horse Comics (US), We3 by Grant Morrison and Frank Quitely, DC Comics / Vertigo (US), (Via Karen Green....

          Lynn Varley

          American comic book colorist (born 1958)

          Lynn Varley is an American comic bookcolorist, notable for her collaborations with her then-husband, comic book writer/artist Frank Miller.

          Biography

          Varley grew up in Livonia, Michigan.[1] Moving to New York City, she found work at Neal Adams' Continuity Associates.[2] She debuted as a comic book colorist on Batman Annual # 8 (1982), written by Mike W.

          Barr and penciled by her then partner Trevor Von Eeden.[3] Around the same time, she became professionally involved with Upstart Associates, a shared studio space on West 29th Street formed by Walter Simonson, Howard Chaykin, Val Mayerik, and Jim Starlin.[4] Varley colored the first two issues of Chaykin's American Flagg![2]Frank Miller later became part of Upstart.[5]

          Varley provided the coloring for Miller's Ronin (1984), an experimental six-issue series from DC Comics that proved that comics in unusual