Humberto Ramos began his career in 1989 at Kaboom Cómics. He was later hired by
DC Comics as the regular penciller for their
Flash spin-off Impulse, which launched in March 1995.[2] Written by
Mark Waid, the superhero/teen comedy series focused on young speedster
Bart Allen, the grandson of the second Flash,
Barry Allen, and his struggles with growing up in an alienated Alabama suburb.
In 1998, Ramos co-founded the imprint
Cliffhanger with comic book artists
Joe Madureira and
J. Scott Campbell. They created the imprint, housed by
Jim Lee's
Image Comics division
Wildstorm, to publish their creator-owned comic books outside the mainstream superhero genre. Both Campbell and Madureira had already built large fanbases with their previous work on Gen13 and Uncanny X-Men respectively, and were two of the most popular comic book artists at the time. Ramos, on the other hand, was not as popular and his inclusion on the imprint was perceived as second choice, after fan-favorite
Michael Turner declined because he was still under contract at
Top Cow.[3] Ramos' first Cliffhanger title Crimson ran for 24 issues and two one-shots, with poor success. It was followed by the
fantasy/
mystery series Out There, months later. Ramos also began illustrating the covers of Peter Parker: Spider-Man with issue #30 and—beginning with May 2002's Peter Parker: Spider-Man #44—additionally did the interior artwork on the four-issue story arc "A Death in the Family" (later collected as Spider-Man: Return of the Goblin;
ISBN0-7851-1019-4), written by
Paul Jenkins.
After his Cliffhanger contract expired, and Out There concluded after 18 issues in early 2003, Ramos left the imprint, apparently not on the best terms,[4] and launched a new Spider-Man title, The Spectacular Spider-Man. The book reunited Ramos with Peter Parker: Spider-Man writer Paul Jenkins and earned him a 2005
Harvey Award nomination as Best Cover Artist. While Ramos worked on Spectacular Spider-Man, another book created by him (although illustrated by Francisco Herrera), the six-issue miniseries Kamikaze, which had originally been planned for 2001,[5] was published by WildStorm under the Cliffhanger imprint.
In 2005, Ramos' creator-owned six-issue miniseries Revelations began publication by
Dark Horse Comics.[5]
Following Revelations, Ramos returned to Marvel Comics, joining writer
Marc Guggenheim as the new creative team on Wolverine, beginning with issue #42 in March 2006.[6]
The same month also saw the release of the first volume of the
space operaKookaburra K, a series of three 46-page
comic albums Ramos illustrated for French comic publisher
Soleil Productions, written by French comic book creator
Crisse.
In April 2014, Ramos and writer
Dan Slott launch
Amazing Spider-Man as part of
Marvel NOW!. The first issue of this new version of The Amazing Spider-Man is, according to Diamond Comics Distributors, "The Best Selling Comic of the 21st Century."[7] In 2016, Ramos and writer
Mark Waid co-created
The Champions for Marvel.