2013年7月11日星期四

The Origin of the Black Spiderman Suit

The Symbiote Costume, also known as the Black Suit, is one of the most significant alterations to Spider-Man's costume. It first appears in The Amazing Spider-Man #252 and Marvel Team-up #141, released concurrently in May 1984. The black costume stemmed from an idea submitted by a then 22-year-old fan named Randy Schueller in 1982, after Marvel had asked its readers for ideas for new Spider-Man stories. "I was thinking, 'This is a guy who is swinging around at night wearing a bright red-and-blue costume.' That's where the black suit came from." Schueller's idea was purchased by Jim Shooter for the sum of $220. Shooter also asked Schueller's help in possibly writing a script for Spider-Man's new look.

Here’s the copy of the letter Randy received from Shooter almost 25 years ago, in August of 1982. 


The History of Spider-Man’s Black Costume


The Black Spiderman Costume was born in Secret Wars #8. Spidey wants to replace his much-torn costume but chooses the wrong costume machine, which released black blob covered his body and then transformed into the black costume.
Spidey discovers that the costume has the power to generate webbing, and returns to earth with his black spiderman suit in Amazing #252. He also discovers that it also has the power to change to appear as normal street clothing. However in the following few issues, the costume starts behaving quite strangely. In Spectacular Spider-Man #99, Felicia gives Peter a set of five cloth Black Costumes, and he wears the first one in Amazing #263. For the next couple of years, he alternates between the red and blue spiderman costumes, and the black spiderman outfit. Different writers had their own preferences, and often he used the black at night, and the red and blues during the day. During a battle with the villain Magma Spidey's last remaining red-and-blue costume was destroyed. At that point Peter decided to forego the red-and-blue and wear only the black costume form now on. But Mary-Jane pointed out that the Black costume reminded her of Venom Black costume, and insisting that Peter no longer wear it, that was the last time Peter wore it regularly. However, Peter did put on the black costume for a few special occasions after that. The reason mostly being that it makes him harder to see at night.

Spiderman Black Suits VS Venom Suit

The black Spiderman costume has a large white spider on the chest and back and white organic web-shooters on the backs of the hands. A variation on the black costume is featured in the film Spider-Man 3. The Spiderman 3 black suit includes the webbing pattern from Spider-Man's red and blue costume with a black coloring and a slightly altered spider symbol, both on his chest and back. The same costume is also worn by Venom, with the added details of Venom's signature teeth, a more muscular appearance and a spider on his chest that closer resembles the comic book version's spider emblem.


Symbiote Spider Costume


First appearance: Amazing Spider-Man #252, Secret Wars #8
In the Marvel Secret Wars series, Spider-Man's costume was torn during battle and he was sent to a machine that would repair it. Unknown to Spider-Man, the machine was actually a prison that contained an alien symbiote, which copied Spider-Man's thoughts about the costume worn by Spider-Woman (Julia Carpenter), and created a duplicate of it.
During and after the Secret War, Spider-Man learned that the costume could respond to his thoughts, change its shape, and create a seemingly unlimited amount of organic webbing. However, after wearing the suit for some time, he began to feel unusually tired and consulted his friend, Mr. Fantastic. Mr. Fantastic said that the suit was actually an alien creature and that it was taking him web-swinging every night while he slept. Spider-Man then had Mr. Fantastic remove the costume using a sound wave generator, as its only weaknesses are loud sound waves and intense heat, and locked it in a protective case. The suit eventually escaped and hung itself in Peter's closet, disguised as one of his red and blue costumes. Unfortunately, Peter grabbed the symbiote and it reattached itself to him, which forced Spider-Man to use the bells of the Our Ladies of Saints church to remove the suit. Many issues later, the suit secretly found and bonded to Eddie Brock, who became Venom.

2013年7月10日星期三

The Amazing Alternative Spider-Man-1

Skrull Spider-Man


Secret Invasion, Marvel's huge crossover comic event from 2008, featured a wide-spread invasion of Earth by the shape-shifting Skrulls. Every Marvel character came under close scrutiny as many heroes were discovered to be dupes. Despite not being a major player in Secret Invasion, Skrull Spider-Man is included in this list for the awesome cover image above alone.

Classic Spiderman Morphsuit

The one and only classic Spider-Man look: Red & Blue Spandex Spiderman Morph suit, sometimes Red and Black costume with spider on front and back with webbing all around the red parts of the costume...This was Peter Parker's first costume after his wrestling costume he wore in Amazing Fantasy #15 and every time he went on to change his look, it wasn't long before he went back to the tried and true classics!

Here are some looks of the classic Spiderman costumes:


Coolest Spider-Man Costume Ever

From his 1st appearance, Spider-Man wore a costume. He had a lot of costumes like classic red and blue costume, the black costume, the armor costume, Ben Reilly's scarlet costume, Iron Spider costume and much more. But, which is the coolest costume of all spider-man costumes EVER?   






The New Spider-Man


First Appearance: Sensational Spider-Man Vol. 1 #0 (1995)

Once the Clone Saga entered that infamous phase where Ben Reilly replaced Peter Parker for a time, Reilly was due for a wardrobe upgrade. The Scarlet Spider suit and its ragged hoodie were swapped out for something a little more reminiscent of Peter's costume. Aside from the external web shooters and the larger spider emblem, the biggest change came to the balance of red and blue areas. The torso was now completely covered in red, while the boots and gloves became stylistically fragmented.

This costume died with Reilly himself, but it's worth noting that it seems to have at least partially inspired the look of Andrew Garfield's costume in the new Amazing Spider-Man movie.

The Verdict: This suit made some interesting changes to the formula, but ultimately they seemed like changes for change's sake.

2013年7月9日星期二

Thoughts on Spider-Woman Jessica Drew


Next to the red and blue suited Peter Parker Spiderman, the red and yellow spandex suited Jessica Drew the spider woman is my favorite character.
I think the potential for what could be done with her character deserves it own book. She is a great character but under used. Even though I love Jessica as a hero and potential ally for Spider-man. I think Bendis as set the foundations for a very cool anti-hero. Jessica tells Peter at the end of the Clone saga, "I'm gonna need money." Peter's reply is, "don't rob any banks," without thinking that she's left pretty much destitute and dealing with a pretty heavy identity crisis. She remembers being a hero, and having a family, friends, a girlfriend, a job, and a school, but now is suddenly left with no support structure. The reasoning and the ability to sneak into buildings and dodge security is pretty sound. But when someone needs help the "Hero's Call" would convince her to do the selfless thing.
Jessica Spider Woman gives a great way to explore and examine what keeps Peter Parker/ Spider-man from reverting to his attitude before Ben died. It also had the potential for some great Gwen Stacy, bi-curious, fan service.
Besides, the spider woman costume is also one of my favorite spider man costumes. Jessica Drew is not particularly noted as a hottie in her own right; it's just when she puts on the mask and the metallic shiny skintight spider-woman costume and exudes the pheromones that she turns into a seductress. Behind the mask, I'd say Jess is not supermodel beautiful; but she has a body to die for.

Spider-Man 2099 Costume


As the Spider-Man in the year of 2099, Miguel O' Hara wore a costume similar to Spider-Man's Costume, but with a more skull-like spider and bluer throughout. This Spider-Man 2099 costume was made of Unstable Molecule Fabric (similar to the Fantastic Four Costumes) and also featured a cape made of a web-like material and a different skull-like mask. The 2099 Spider-Man is also the only playable character who is not an alternate universed Peter Parker in Spider-Man Shattered Dimensions.

Spider-Man 2099 was the concept of Peter David and Rick Leonardi back in 1992, much of the fame from the 2099 Spidey Suit is its monstrous likeness. It also appears to carry traits of the evolved Venom look, like claws, spinnerets on the backs of the hands, and the jagged, thorny fins on the forearms and legs. One unique trait of this uniform was the web-based air-foils that streamed from O'Hara's underarms to his back; this may have been idealized from the Spider-Man Costume of the 60's onward who had webbing under his arms (although they eventually disappeared). Even though these additions allowed the hero to glide through the air, they were an accidental part of the costume which Miguel received through affiliation with Thorites, a group of radicals that believed Thor would eventually return to their time.

The Alien Costume Symbiote: VENOM

What is VENOM?
VENOM is an alien symbiote, a life form that requires a host to bond around for its survival. The creature is a sentient alien with a gooey, almost liquid-like form. VENOM creature gives its host enhanced powers.
VENOM first appeared as an "alien costume" in The Amazing Spider-Man #252 (May 1984) it was created by Randy Schueller and David Michelinie, with Mike Zeck designing the alien symbiote costume and Todd McFarlane drawing the first VENOM appearance.

What are its powers and abilities?
The VENOM Symbiote has adapted the spider powers of Spider-Man.
The Symbiote allows the user limited shape-shifting.
The symbiote is capable of healing injuries in the host at a faster rate than normal human healing allows. The symbiote is also capable of healing injuries and illnesses that current human medical care cannot such as cancer.

Who are the host of the VENOM Symbiote?
1. Peter Parker SPIDER-MAN
The Amazing Spider-Man #252 (May 1984)
Black Costume Spider-Man

2. Eddie Brock
Amazing Spider-Man Vol 1 #299 (April, 1988)
Venom Original Black Suit

3. Angelo Fortunato
Marvel Knights: Spider-Man Vol 1 #6 (November, 2004)

4. Mac Gargan
Marvel Knights: Spider-Man Vol 1 #9 (February, 2005)

5. Flash Thompson
Amazing Spider-Man Vol 1 #654


6. Ann Weying
Amazing Spider-Man Vol 1 #375 (March, 1993)

7. Ms. Marvel
Siege Vol 1 #3

8. Fantastic Four
Spider-Man and the Fantastic Four #2


The Story of Spider-Man's Black Costume












When Spider-Man 3 finally arrives in theaters on May 4th, the eagerly-awaited film will culminate a cycle of hype initiated over a year ago when a single image surfaced on the internet. The picture, purportedly plucked from Sony and featuring a rain-soaked Spider-Man locked in a contemplative pose, seemed innocent enough, save for one key detail: Spidey was dressed in black.

To comic book aficionados, the event was nothing less than earth-shattering. As the fanboys struggled to regain the ability to speak, those of us unfamiliar with the Spider-Man mythos were left wondering: What's up with that black suit? Where did it come from? Has Spider-Man gone goth? Did Tobey Maguire put on too many pounds after Spider-Man 2, forcing producers to opt for a more slimming costume? As expected, the folks at Sony, content to watch their viral marketing work its magic, refused to divulge any details.

Humble Beginnings:
The story of the black suit begins simply enough. As is the case with all great ideas, it started out as a marketing gimmick, conceived over 20 years ago -- 1984, to be precise. The nation was ebullient, having triumphantly emerged from recession with newfound confidence, basking in its superpower status.
But not everyone shared in the renewed optimism. Over at the hallowed halls of Marvel Comics, all was not well. Interest in their products, most notably the flagship Spider-Man titles, had stagnated. The character, once a counter-culture icon, had grown a bit stale after 20-plus years as Marvel's venerable cash cow. The time had come for a change.
And so it was decided: Spidey would recieve a makeover. After all, he'd been swinging around New York City clad in essentially the same red and blue costume since his introduction in 1962. It was time for the web-slinger to don new wardrobe, one more suitable for the go-go 80s -- something with attitude, something with style, and, most importantly, something to help sell a new line of toys based on Marvel's prominent titles. Lo, the black suit was born.
Artist Mike Zeck's original designThough Spider-Man debuted the suit in May 1984 for issue #252 of Amazing Spider-Man, it wasn't until several months later that a story was concocted to explain the new duds. According to the official storyline, the change occurred during the Secret Wars, a mammoth crossover series in which a nearly omnipotent being named The Beyonder whisked all of Marvel's prominent heroes and villains to an alternate world for massive battle royale. After his outfit got shredded in battle, Spidey searched for a way to mend his mangled suit, having apparently lacked the foresight to bring along a few extra backup suits. With sewing machines understandably scarce in deep space, Spidey opted to use what he thought to be a high-tech "fabric replication" device. Seemingly responding to his thoughts, the mysterious machine spat out a big black ball of goo that engulfed his entire body, eventually molding into a snazzy, form-fitting outfit, perfect for both crime-fighting on weeknights and clubbing on weekends.

New Suit = New Powers:
In addition to looking cool, the new suit held a number of advantages over the old one. It came on and off automatically according to his thoughts, eliminating the annoyance of changing out of work clothes. It also produced its own webbing (at the time, the comic book Spider-Man had to manufacture his own web fluid) and heightened his existing abilities. Perhaps most importantly, it could change form in order to store things Spidey picked up during his adventures, overgcoming what was arguably the old costume's greatest flaw: a lack of pockets.
The black suit ignited a firestorm of controversy, with many hardcore comics fans decrying it as tantamount to sacrilege. Spider-Man's traditional red and blue costume was iconic, they argued, on par with those of his D.C. rivals Superman and Batman. The negative response was puzzling for a medium where constant change is the norm: characters are regularly killed off and brought back from the dead. (Captain America is the latest superhero to fall prey to this common industry practice.)
Despite the uproar (or perhaps because of it), sales of Spider-Man titles soared -- at least temporarily. For the next few years, Spidey dressed in black exclusively as he battled the bad guys, but he never quite succeeded in winning over the die-hards.
As the new suit's novelty ebbed, Marvel opted for a compromise of sorts, dressing Spider-Man in the traditional suit by day and the black one at night. By then, the writing was on the wall, and the decision was eventually made to ditch the black suit permanently.

The Birth of Venom:
So Marvel took lemons and made lemonade, crafting an ingenious storyline that turned a discarded gimmick into perhaps the greatest Spider-Man villain of all time. As the story goes, the suit turned out to be an alien symbiote with a mind of its own -- an evil one at that -- and it wanted control of Peter Parker. Spidey Back in Black
After an epic struggle, Spidey eventually broke the symbiote's powerful grip and cast it aside, where it found a much more agreeable host in the form of Peter Parker's photojournalist rival Eddie Brock (portrayed by Topher Grace in Spider-Man 3). Brock fused with the symbiote, becoming Venom, a dark, snarling beast that lived only for Spider-Man's destruction.
Ah, but the story doesn't end there. Marvel brought the black suit out of storage in February for Amazing Spider-Man #539, just in time for the run-up to the release of Spider-Man 3. (They dubbed the return "Back in Black".) Never fear, Spidey purists: it's only temporary.
Or so they tell us.

Alternate Designs for The Amazing Spider-Man


Here’s some alternate looks that Spidey could have been sporting in Mark Webb’s The Amazing Spider-Man.

Alternate Amazing Spider-Man Suits by Eddie Yang

This is one thing I never really understand. I quite like the 1st and 3rd one but surely Eddie must have known they weren’t going to stray too far from the costume everyone’s familiar with.

Alternate Spidey Suitss by Jerad S. Marantz

These costumes are much closer to what we actually got on the big screen. 


Venom Is Getting His Own Movie Without Spider-Man


Producers Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach dished that the alien costume symbiote venom will get his own movie while discussing The Amazing Spider-Man. Although it will share the same universe created by the upcoming Spider-Man reboot, yet the two characters won't share the screen. Tolmach explained to the press that he is trying to get all these worlds live together in peace someday and make sense with one another.

This approach could potentially break a lot of fans' hearts, but at least they want to make a "huge amazing movie" about the beloved character. 

The movie is a story of Eddie Brock. The producers want it to be as close to the comics as possible, especially in Eddie Brock’s story. But again, pseudo-science is becoming science. All these tidbits about webs, artificial webs, is a huge industry now. Spiderwebs have unique qualities that will be huge for communications, fibers, and so forth. At this point, fans will probably take any incarnation of Venom other than the version they saw in Spider-Man 3.

However, it will be pretty cool to see Hollywood make a big budget blockbuster focusing on a character that is typically portrayed as a villain instead of a hero, don't U think?
Find more Spider-Man Costumes and Venom Costume here:

The Scarlet Spider-Man Costumes


When Peter Parker still had dibs on the Spider-Man identity but Ben Reilly wanted to do some web-swinging of his own, the Scarlet Spider was born. His first appearance is in Web of Spider-Man #118, and then the identity of the Scarlet Spider has been used by several characters: Peter Parker (while Ben posed as him in prison), Joe Wade, a group of three Michael Van Patrick clones working with the Initiative, and Kaine.

The Scarlet Spiderman Costume was designed by Tom Lyle. With some new colors and a Scarlet Spider hoodie over the classic superhero spandex suit, Ben took his design to the streets. His spider symbol goes on the front & the back, not straight up & down like Spider-Man’s symbol, but rather angled to the left as it’s worn. Short-lived though it may have been, the Scarlet Spider duds still stand as a bold take on the iconic Scarlet Spider costume.

Controversial Scarlet Spider


The Scarlet Spider is a pretty controversial character, heralding from the spider man 'Clone Saga' in the 90's. The Scarlet Spider was Spider-man's clone, come back after a few years away. He made the scarlet spider costume quickly, an all-red bodysuit, and threw on a blue hoodie he got from the Museum of Natural History to complete the look.
If you're concerned about the name then don't fret as it was actually worked into the comic as what others called him (the character himself didn't like the name and thought it was stpuid) - that's a nice bit of pre-Marvel movie-verse character name dropping where it has become common place now.

Personally I always thought Scarlet was pretty cool, and even though lots of fans take issue with the scarlet spider hoodie over spandex design, I liked it.

2013年7月8日星期一

The Most Marvelous Spider-Man Costumes

5. PETER PORKER 

First Appearance: MARVEL TAILS #1 (1983) 
Last Seen In: ULTIMATE CIVIL WAR: SPIDER-HAM #1 (2007) 
Worn Because: A pig with spider powers needed a costume. 
Why It Makes The List: "He's shorter, stouter, and, um, porkier. He's Peter Porker, Spectacular Spider-Ham! And he has a snout and a curly tail, so don't judge what's inside the costume, judge the costume itself, kids. This week, at least…" – Secret Cabal member RunawayJ 
Spotlight Comic: ULTIMATE CIVIL WAR: SPIDER-HAM #1—Peter Porker returns to solve the mystery of the missing thought balloons! 

4. SPIDER ARMOR 

First Appearance: WEB OF SPIDER-MAN #100 (1993) 
Last Seen In: WEB OF SPIDER-MAN #100 (1993) 
Worn Because: Spidey needed extra protection in the midst of a gang war. 
Why It Makes The List: "The Spider Armor is the Spider-Man equivalent of empty calories. It's totally a guilty pleasure and yes, we know it makes no sense for a character centered on speed and agility to be weighed down by a bulky metal costume…but c'mon—it's so shiny! The Armor didn't stick around longer than one specifically targeted adventure, so we can forgive its impracticality and merely bask in its wonderful excess." – Secret Cabal member Annihilator882 Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN v1 #9—Peter Parker conducts an early experiment in armoring up to take on Electro! 

3. FANTASTIC FOUR COSTUME WITH BAG MASK 

First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #258 (1984) 
Last Seen In: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #258 (1984) 
Worn Because: After ditching his alien symbiote with the help of the FF, Peter Parker needed a change of clothes. 
Why It Makes The List: "You've got this alien parasite that acts as a substitute for everything you wear—so what do you do when Mr. Fantastic separates the nasty thing from your body and you're just standing there naked? You grab a spare Fantastic Four costume and a paper bag, of course! It's the ultimate disguise! I mean, the worst thing that could happen is that people think you're the Thing's brother and you're hiding some kind of grotesque disfigurement under that bag, right? – Secret Cabal member HeartOfOak 
Spotlight Comic: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #258—Spider-Man must seek the help of the Fantastic Four to fend off his alien costume gone bad! 

2. RICOCHET 

First Appearance: AMAZING SPIDER-MAN #434 (1998) 
Last Seen In: Currently worn by a second Ricochet 
Worn Because: Suspected for murder, Spider-Man adopted four alternate identities, including Ricochet. 
Why It Makes The List: "There's a reason Ricochet remains semi-active in the Marvel Universe as one of the Loners while his Slingers teammates toil mostly in obscurity or death…well, there are a few reasons, but his rad costume is certainly one of them. The three quarter face mask that covers facial features while letting the costume's wearer's hair to fly free provides a unique and modern look while the leather jacket adorned with throwing discs makes for a nice functional addition. When the Slingers pilfered Spider-Man's wardrobe, Johnny Gallo struck the jackpot while Dusk got caught swinging." – Annihilator882 
Spotlight Comic: THE LONERS #2—Find out what Ricochet does on his day off in sunny California! 

1. BEN REILLY 

First Appearance: SENSATIONAL SPIDER-MAN v1 #0 (1996) 
Last Seen In: PETER PARKER: SPIDER-MAN #75 (1996) 
Taking over the role of Spider-Man from Peter Parker, Ben wanted to add his own touch. A new take on an old classic, Ben Reilly did a little revamp on Peter Parker's iconic Spiderman costume before hitting the streets as Spider-Man. He added a bigger spider, did a little rearranging of the red and blue and tossed the web shooters on the outside. All this together gave a fresh new look to everyone's friendly neighborhood web-swinger while still preserving the spirit of the original get-up. And if you like this costume, you should check out amazing spider girl costume—what's that they say about fashion going in cycles? SPIDER-GIRL #44—Peter Parker recounts the story of Ben Reilly to his daughter May, aka Spider-Girl! 

Jessica Drew Spider Woman Costumes


Jessica Drew is the most famous woman to take on the role of Spider-Woman. She's not only the first Spider-Woman in comic books but also the one had her own animated television series that lasted from 1979 to 1980.
The most well-known Spider-Woman costume is the red and yellow costume. This tight full body suit is brightly colored for the comic book world but bares a lot of similarities to the black widow spider. Rather than having the main color be black, the dominate color is red. The red hourglass associated with black widows is then colored in yellow on her costume. Spider-Woman’s womanly curves are accentuated by having this hourglass shape placed in the center of her costume.
The original Jessica Drew spider-woman costume looks very similar to her present costume. The only major variation lies in the mask design. This would be one of the few times a woman taking on the role of Spider-Woman would cover her long hair. Most preferred the windblown look.

Mayday Parker, the future daughter of Spider-Man, at first, she was just SPIDER-GIRL, and then she became the AMAZING SPIDER-GIRL, and then went in THE SPECTACULAR SPIDER-GIRL.
Here is Spider Girl "Mayday" In her Classic Red and Blue Spandex Spider Girl Costume.
The Spider-Girl series ended with its 100th issue, giving it the record for the longest running title Marvel Comics has ever had that starred a female protagonist and was not a team book. Later on, Mayday got to star in the new series The Amazing Spider-Girl and now Spider Girl Costume was slightly altered. Rather than the webs solidly wrapping around her torso, she now had sloping areas of black/blue extending from her sleeves. It's a nice touch, highlighting her body's shape while also making the suit a bit more slimming, which isn't really a superhero concern but is a nice touch, eh?

All Spiderman 2099 Suits






Spider-Man 2099 (Miguel O'Hara) is one of the many future versions of classic superheroes living in the year 2099, a century after the current Marvel Universe time period. He is the Spider-Man of the future.

The original Spider-Man 2099 suit is similar to classic Spider-Man's suit, but with a more skull-like spider and more blue throughout. Miguel chooses this costume in particular because it is the only clothing he has that is made from Unstable Molecule Fabric which invented by Reed Richards of the Fantastic Four, so that it will not be torn or shred by the spider-talons that now occupy his hands and feet.
Spider-Man 2099 costume also has a small, web-like airfoil attached to the back of his costume. The material for the air foil allows Spider-Man 2099 to limited gliding abilities, shift direction while in free fall and is very good at slowing down his descent. 
Spiderman 2099 in comic books and anime look;
Spiderman 2099 in video games look

2013年7月5日星期五

Iron Spiderman Costume Ideas


I have always loved the Iron spiderman costume but no one has really seemed to capture the lenses as they should be. As far as the "waldoes" or legs I've only seen one person do this but they did it using a material that was filled with stuffing almost like a pillow. 
I want mine to have that sharp metallic look. I also want the lenses to be able to be pushed away from the eyes and back in place either manually or by using some remote system similar to how an iron man mask closes using electronics. 

I would also love to have some of the lighting on the Iron spider costume like in this picture as well. I am developing some ideas but would love any creative input to get this rolling. I plan on starting with a base red body suit dye subed to try to give it a metallic electronic look. I plan on making all the armor and attaching it to the body suit using magnets but haven't decided on how to make the armor yet. I wish this would be epic if I can pull it off!

Why does Iron Spider Costume Have Only 3 Waldoes?


If you look at dr. octopus, he has 2 legs, 2 arms, and 4 mechanical arms which means 8 legs which an octopus should have. In Spiderman red and blue costume, there are no waldoes, but only 2 arms and 2 legs, as we all know, spiders have 8 legs. In the iron spider costume, he has 3 waldoes, or mechanical arms, which means he has 7 legs. 

Since Tony Stark created this for him, I don’t understand why he only gave the costume 3 waldoes instead of 4.
So, how come spiderman in his iron spiderman costume has only 3 waldoes? I have my own reasons.

1.Maybe because of u put another waldo on the back, he would be able to walk correctly. the waldoes can help him walk but if u want it to walk with 4 of them you'd need to put it in the front which would look ridiculous.

2.Maybe Tony Stark made a mistake but by the time he realized it he didn’t feel like fixing it. 

What do you think about it?

2013年7月4日星期四

Hot Spider-Woman and Her Costume

I guess only some people know the story behind Spider-Woman and Spider-Woman Costume. Judging from her name and appearance, probably Spider-Woman is a perfect female version of Spider-Man. Indeed, the opinion is not completely wrong. Spider-Woman possesses super human ability as Spider-Man does, such as great reflexes, agility, enormous speed, and venom blast shoot to enable her to crawl like a spider from a building to another building.


Jessica Drew is the original Spider-Woman, who left the role in the early 1980s. As of the late 2000s, she has returned to it. This version of the character starred in her own animated TV series in 1979. She was ranked 54th in Comics Buyer's Guide's "100 Sexiest Women in Comics" list. Jessica was involved in a brief relationship with Spider-Man once, and she and Hawkeye have shown an attraction to each other. Jessica Drew Spider-Woman Costume is a red, yellow, and black Spider-Woman costume with a red and black mask to conceal her identity. All of Jessica's powers come from her own body but her costume does provide her with a web-like material to help her flight.


Julia Carpenter is initially known as the second Spider-Woman, and later known as Arachne, and then as the second Madame Web, she appeared regularly as Spider-Woman, both in and out of costume. Her classic costume is a black-and-white Spider-Woman costume.

There is other three more Spider-Woman: Mattie Franklin, Charlotte Witter, Veranke.