"This week, we do it a bit like our friends at Project Rooftop.
Wonder Woman changed her costume recently and this was apparently a big thing. I was too busy with other things to really... care...
But! I thought this would be a fun and easy game for you people!
Let's go with the earlier version of the character, because it's a bit mental: "...Wonder Woman owed her abilities to the goddess Aphrodite creating Amazons superior to men, with Diana being the best of their kind. Wonder Woman was...able to will a tremendous amount of brain energy into her muscles and limbs because of her Amazon training, endowing her with extraordinary strength and speed.
'...she is able to tear a steel door off its hinges. In one of her earliest appearances, she is shown running easily at 80 mph...
"...Wonder Woman's Amazon training also gave her limited telepathy, profound scientific knowledge, and the ability to speak every language known to man and beyond. She was even fluent in caveman and Martian... the ability to ride the air currents as if flying, even sensing air updrafts with her fingers; ...the ability to vibrate into another dimension; the ability to bestow wisdom to other beings; the ability to throw her tiara with such skill it could stop bullets; ...Wonder Woman was able to further increase her strength. She was unable to remove her bracelets without going insane. In times of great need, however, she would do just that, in order to temporarily augment her power tenfold. Since she would become a threat to friend and foe alike, she would use Amazonian berserker rage only as a weapon of last resort...
That's all you know. Extrapolate and design from that."
Thanks, man... I'm currently coloring some pitches, my day job is good for paying the bills but it takes up most of my time... I'm also going to draw a very short one-shot pitch for Mark Millar's Clint magazine, written by Juan Arteaga (with whom I did years ago The New Adventures of Sigmund Freud)...
Its an awesome redesign of Wonder Woman, but it's also just a great design for an amazon warrior. Good balance, great colors and avoids the tired silicon pin-up motif of so much modern comic book art. I also like the tired, but focused look to the eyes.