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By Sofia that
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Supergirl is ready to party, and after her cameo in Superman she gets her own film called Supergirl: Tomorrow woman. But she has a lot to live.
Since her first appearance at Action Comics #252 in the late fifties, Supergirl has had nearly 30 costume changes. Mostly she is stuck with the blue and red trademark, but every now and then, she changes her color palette, as recently when she got all red to become new Red Lantern.
Sometimes bold, sometimes dangerous, sometimes boring, sometimes oh so 80s, Supergirl never disappoint. Here’s a look back at some of the dangerous, craziest and most interesting superhero fashion choices of DC’s most powerful female hero.
This 1971 supergirl outfit included bold and, for now, even a shocking design that leaves both sides of her body completely bare of fabric. Her costume was part of a series where fans presented their own designs to Dc comics.
He is not ready in the battle; It’s hard to imagine that she goes to her feet with Satan Girl and keep everything PG in his uniform. He is also out of Kara Zor-El character, which does not usually deviate towards obvious sexuality in her uniform. This supergirl outfit is more related to someone like ivy poison, but it may deserve props for being bold.
Adventure’s supergirl costume #410 had three different variations. For simplicity, we group them as one look here. It features a quite deep V neck and is the only time Supergirl ever comes close to displaying décolletage. After this design, all future supergirl outfits avoided V-Necks.
The first time Kara had paired his midriff for the Superman: the animated series In 1996. Since then, the style on top of that crop has been a popular design option for comic book writers. Many future costumes have used variations on this bare midriff design.
One of the most edgiest versions of Supergirl was removed by now dead artist Michael Turner. Its design includes the bare midriff first discovered Superman: the animated A series but more realistic and, in some sense, scimier.
This is Consistent with all the female character sketches of Turner. This particular issue was also notable for repeating the source of Supergirl in the DC Comic Inversion.
In this case her outfit is more used as draping, than as a real dress. Therefore, it may not count. Still, this is a supergirl’s most revealing cover design. As a Superman/Batman #13 design, this was also removed by the late Michael Turner.
The book itself is a rare discovery, having been published in German only as a cover variant to the German edition of Superman/Batman #8. The prices for this book are over $ 300 and you will often not find a copy available on eBay.