10 Sep 2024
Away-Ink: A look to find the free

Host Empiric posting
A last standing day for the comics to be shared and help the view count rise up. Which title of the week was the best page put together for the 37th week. Was it the day with extra work. Or the day where an answer went without saying when a comic strip was talked of not of Away-ink. All the titles have run this week including the misplaced doorway troubles of No and Steel. What will be unfurled line today? Join in with a click to see.
Away Forward Ink the Path
The direction of the show.

Olsen: “Life of the idea. A walk of the dash.”
Cohen: That is a difference from the thinking posters. How does that play?
Olsen: The dash was started by the poster. Which brings the work showcased as the end. An Experience from first look to the last.
La Tinta
The playlist is not cache

Thinking the information leads to a known that is not fully translucent.
O.H.T. Anchor: Lamps up next.
Nothing to be said by the gathered.
The Clone Did It
A clearing in sight

Is there a plan going forward?
Phil: An interview is set, with “The Wording.” The steps after that are yet to be known.
Puzzlement
In the alleyway

Used or Not
A look to find the free

The quibbles of the scribbles

The day before To-Boga. Can’t wait to see the step back for “The clone Did It.”

Always look forward to the “Away Forward Ink the Path.” What answer was not given with the comic strip?

Should have done a brief history for Ziggy comic strip comparison made.

Right how history could it be?

With link at the end. Ziggy, the lovable loser comic strip character, was created by Tom Wilson in the mid-1960s. Initially, Wilson drew a character similar to Ziggy as an elevator operator offering political commentary in editorial cartoons, but it didn’t gain syndication. Later, Ziggy appeared in an American Greetings gift book, “When You’re Not Around” (1968), which caught the attention of Kathleen Andrews, a founder of Universal Press Syndicate. A deal was struck, and Ziggy was born, debuting in 15 newspapers in June 1971, eventually growing to over 600 publications.


Sorry for asking but extra reading for the supports today…
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