Charles Paris
1877–1968
Charles S. Paris was an American comic book artist born on September 25, 1911, who spent the bulk of his career working as an inker, primarily for DC Comics. He passed away on March 19, 1994.
Paris built a reputation as a reliable and skilled inker across several decades, with his work appearing on some of DC's most enduring titles. His longest and most substantial association was with the Batman family of books — particularly *Batman* and *Detective Comics* — where his inking became a familiar presence for readers throughout the mid-twentieth century. He also contributed regularly to *World's Finest Comics* and worked on the offbeat superhero series *Metamorpho*, demonstrating a range that extended beyond Gotham's dark streets.
Though inkers were frequently overlooked in the early comic book industry, craftsmen like Paris provided the defining visual texture that audiences actually saw on the printed page, translating pencilers' work into finished, reproducible art. His career spanned several decades of active work beginning in 1943, weathering multiple shifts in the industry's style and business practices. Paris remained a steady professional presence at DC during a period when the publisher was shaping what would become the foundation of superhero comics, and his contributions to the look of Batman in particular left a quiet but lasting mark on the character's visual history.
Full bibliography (first 500) · 57 series
Original biography and editorial content © comicbooks.com™. Information drawn in part from Wikipedia and the Grand Comics Database. Portrait by Charles Soulier / Wikimedia Commons (Public domain).