A couple of things I've been paying attention to lately . . . actually things I noticed when I was younger, but I'm starting to pay attention to them again.
One thing is the profile pages, such as those on Hollywood stars. Sometimes they are about well-known actors like Mickey Rooney or Cary Grant, but often I will find an actor I either didn't know or had forgotten. Sometimes the artists on these pages are unidentified, but their style of art is often photo-realistc.
When I was younger, I noticed these pages back when DC did the FAMOUS FIRST EDITIONS--where I believe most of the art was done by Jack Burnley. But even before that I remember seeing similar art by Burnley for the sports papers that my brother bought when we were kids.
Well, okay, this kind of feature might be something that a lot of other readers notice--but I also have a renewed interest in something that maybe most people would overlook. This is the part at the top of the page where it will often give the name of the comic book or the feature.
When I first started buying comics, this part had already been cut from most comics. I'd see it on the DC 80 PAGE GIANTS, but on the new comics it was gone. I assume that this part was chopped to give more space for the art on the pages. But I always wonder why they put that text at the top of the page in the first place. When I got back issues, I found it a curiosity and a signature of the comic's age. I considered it old fashioned as opposed to the more efficient use of the page in the new comics I was buying.
Since then I've usually overlooked this aspect of the page, but recently I was scanning a page from an early '60s issue of THE FLASH and I realized that the font for "THE FLASH" has speed lines on it just like the title logo for THE FLASH. That got me looking at the tops of the pages for other comics and seeing what kinds of differences there were between titles as well as between publishers. Even when the text is a standard font, it's interesting to note the font used by a particular publisher as opposed to another.
Looking at the comics on CB+ I notice that some old publishers apparently didn't put this text at the top of the page--or else scanners are simply chopping off that bit when they scan the page. I could see why some early publishers might have put this text on the page to compensate for the fact that the reprinted dailies or Sundays didn't quite fit the standard comic book page--or maybe it was a convention that they borrowed from some Sunday sections.
I'm sure some of the comic historians around here have a better explanation for the existence of this top of page text and its absence from other comics.