The day after Hillary Clinton became the first woman to receive the presidential nomination of a major U.S. political party, most newspapers led with the historic news.

Most of them also led with a photo of Bill Clinton.

The dissonance between the news and the images was quickly met with critiques that even on a night in which a woman figuratively — and somewhat literally — broke through a glass ceiling, the coverage still had tinges of sexism.

The newspapers were in a tricky position since Hillary Clinton did not make a personal appearance on Tuesday night, opting to address the audience through a live video.

Meanwhile, Bill Clinton gave the night's primary speech, discussing how he and his wife met and married.

Still, the inclusion of either Bill Clinton or Bernie Sanders struck a chord.

simple proof of enduring sexism: no Hillary, or even a woman, on the front page after 1st woman nominated president pic.twitter.com/FvkxDfOAJK — Anne Helen Petersen (@annehelen) July 27, 2016

The Wall Street Journal did publish an issue with Hillary Clinton's appearance on the cover, a shift away from an earlier edition that featured Bill Clinton, who spoke on Tuesday night.

At some point overnight @WSJ decided "Hillary Clinton Wins Nomination" headline needed a picture of Hillary. #picks pic.twitter.com/uBiZiIIQte — Pat Kiernan (@patkiernan) July 27, 2016

Others, such as the Chicago Tribune and the Washington Post went with a focus on Bill Clinton.

.@chicagotribune marked Hillary's moment, but with a photo of Bill. pic.twitter.com/yTOFkHmg4M — Amanda Wills (@AmandaWills) July 27, 2016

Image: Newseum

Image: newseum

The Boston Globe went with the split screen option, but also added a timeline of Bill Clinton photos.

In today’s Globe: Bill Clinton’s speech #DemsinPhilly, new clues about Gardner heist?, more https://t.co/AybJhLDfbO pic.twitter.com/EERzUGXySq — The Boston Globe (@BostonGlobe) July 27, 2016

The New York Times and USA Today had arguably the best covers. Each outlet used both the text and visuals to frame Clinton's historic nomination.

Image: Newseum

Image: Newseum

As for international outlets, the Sydney Morning Herald might have had the best cover of any newspaper across the globe, featuring a picture of silhouetted figures in front of a screen that played a message from Hillary Clinton.