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* John Romita, Jr. saw his art style change drastically in the 1980s. When he started out, his style was closer to his father's, but by his run on ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' in the late 80s, he'd developed his own unique style, which is a bit blockier and chunkier. The differences really stand out on his work on ''ComicBook/IronMan''; a subtle evolution is evident between ''Demon in a Bottle'' and ''Doomquest'', but jump to his return to the book for ''Armor Wars II'' years later and the difference is very clear.

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* John Romita, Jr. saw his art style change drastically in the 1980s. When he started out, his style was closer to his father's, but by his run on ''ComicBook/{{Daredevil}}'' in the late 80s, he'd developed his own unique style, which is a bit blockier and chunkier. The differences really stand out on his work on ''ComicBook/IronMan''; a subtle evolution is evident between ''Demon in a Bottle'' ''ComicBook/DemonInABottle'' and ''Doomquest'', ''ComicBook/{{Doomquest}}'', but jump to his return to the book for ''Armor Wars II'' years later and the difference is very clear.
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* This also happened with ''Creator/LoveAndCapes'', between [[http://www.loveandcapes.com/readit/lnc0104.html the first appearance of Abby and Mark]] and [[http://www.loveandcapes.com/readit/lnc0145.html just an issue later.]]

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* This also happened with ''Creator/LoveAndCapes'', ''Webcomic/LoveAndCapes'', between [[http://www.loveandcapes.com/readit/lnc0104.html the first appearance of Abby and Mark]] and [[http://www.loveandcapes.com/readit/lnc0145.html just an issue later.]]
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* When ''ComicStrip/KnightsOfTheDinnerTable'' debuted in ''SHADIS'' magazine, the artwork was, frankly, hideous. Even when it got it's own magazine it wasn't much better - the characters were usually just staring out into space, their mouths hanging wide open to disgorge their speech balloons. The positions of the characters were also extremely limited, due to it's nature as a CutAndPasteComic. Now, the art has improved enormously. The basic character models are still the same, but the expressions look far more natural and varied, the environments and objects have more depth, and they have a far more flexible range of motion, from standing to driving to {{Table Flip}}ping.

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* When ''ComicStrip/KnightsOfTheDinnerTable'' debuted in ''SHADIS'' magazine, the artwork was, frankly, hideous. Even when it got it's own magazine it wasn't much better - the characters were usually just staring out into space, their mouths hanging wide open to disgorge their speech balloons. The positions of the characters were also extremely limited, due to it's nature as a CutAndPasteComic. Now, the art has improved enormously. The basic character models are still the same, but the expressions look far more natural and varied, the environments and objects have more depth, and they have a far more flexible range of motion, from standing to driving to {{Table Flip}}ping.FlippingTheTable.

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