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Copertina della rivista pulp The All-Story (ottobre 1912).
Copertina del fumetto Jo-Jo - Congo King n.23 (1949)
 Anaglyph techniques have been used to produce 3-dimensional comic books since the early 1950s, using carefully constructed line drawings printed in colors appropriate to the filter glasses provided. The material presented came from a wide variety of genres, including war, horror, crime, and superhero. Anaglyphed comics were far more difficult to produce than normal comics, requiring each panel to be drawn multiple times on layers of acetate.
Attempting to circumvent these problems, several comic book publishers experimented with alternative 3D techniques, including the "TrueVision" format devised by American Comics Group. Unlike most other 3D comics of the time, AGC's titles were printed in full color, and could supposedly be viewed without anaglyph filters (images taken from Confessions of the Lovelorn number 54, November 1954). While the first 3D comic in 1953 sold over two million copies, by the end of the year sales had bottomed out, though 3D comics have continued to be released irregularly up until the present day.