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paqart

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  • Comic Collecting Interests
    Golden Age
    Silver Age
    Bronze Age
    Copper Age
    Modern Age
    Original Comic Art
  • Occupation
    Commercial photographer, lecturer, artist
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    Art, writing, photography, Yoga

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  1. You only barely beat me. I got 14, and had 1 bulls-eye. The Web comic got me big time. This contest is my worst ever, so it's pretty embarrassing to admit I scored 36 in total, an average of 9 per round. Normally I get around 22 or so. Oof.
  2. 2 buls-eyes and a total of 4 points. If only the other two rounds went as well. To have a shot at 6th, I may need perfect scores from now on.
  3. I find the moderns much more difficult than GA, but I don't mind. Noticing the pain and wanting the pain to stop are different things. In this case, it's good practice.
  4. Not that I think it matters, but I have not collected slabs for that long, and I joined CGC during a period when I wasn't collecting comics at all. I was trying to find information on a store I used to grade comics for called Recycle Books, and that led to a post by someone here. To see it, I had to become a member. To my surprise, the guy remembered me, though I was doing that work back in 1978. I had almost no interactions after that until I moved back to the US after finishing my PhD in 2018. At that time, someone at the town dump gave me a stack of comics as I was tossing out all the boxes from the move. The stack included a Giant-Size Man-Thing #4, with one of my all-time favorite Brunner covers. At that time, I may not have ever seen a slab, though I'm not sure about that, because I had been to a couple of Strip Beurs (comic book conventions) in the Netherlands. However, my interest in those shows was to let my daughter have a good time while I talked to some artists I knew, and largely ignored the comics, which were almost all European. The GSMT4 got me interested in comics again, so I started looking for SA/GA comics, mostly GA Barks. I bought my first slab, a New Teen Titans 2, in 2020 or so, after reading about newsstand editions. I felt like an insufficiently_thoughtful_person for buying it, but since then have accumulated over 100, though 75 of those were sent in by me. The ones I sent in were all moderns and were put into whatever slab was current in 2022. The remaining slabs are mostly for current newsstand editions of modern comics that almost certainly wouldn't have been worth putting in a slab until at least 2010. None of my GA comics are in slabs. The CMA 51 would have been the first if I had kept it. The reason is that I don't like to have slabbed comics that I actually want to read. Since I don't read the modern comics, I don't mind they are in a slab and it seems to help their value for trading later, though I haven't sold or traded any yet. I do like reading the Binder/Beck stories, so I wasn't that happy about getting the 51 in a slab, but all the other copies were in such bad shape I didn't want them anyway. I'd be willing to buy certain GA comics in a slab, but not many. For instance low grade comics that have great covers but are in such awful shape that they can't be read anyway (like early issues of Action)
  5. And succeeded brilliantly. Not sure why you use this video, because it makes it seem like you don't think you succeeded. What about my other question though? I'm curious whether the inner portion of the slab is sealed on all six sides or not, meaning two layers of plastic between the comic and the outside of the slab.
  6. So if someone tells me I don't know geometry because of a misunderstanding about the shape of a slab, he has to know geometry better? Look, RMA ruffled my feathers, but I'm cool now. maybe you don't need to take this any further. I wanted some info and got it, though it was difficult because of the way I described the problem. As a teacher, my position is that the reward for ignorance is education, not a demand to be less ignorant.
  7. So I have to know the answer to the question before asking? Is that right? Or do I have to know the answer to this question also before asking?
  8. Excellent answer, thanks. The pictures weren't working for me. Now that we're both talking, let me ask something you may think you've already answered, but isn't clear to me: I'm thinking of these cases now as a box wedged between two halves of the outer shell, secured by the four corner posts. I didn't examine the partially open CMA closely enough to see if the inner box was sealed on all six sides. It didn't occur to me that it might be, or I would have put on my higher powered pair of glasses to see it better. I also may have used something to prop the corner open while I photographed it (something I didn't want to do for fear that doing so might make it worse). One of my photos did catch the label slipping slightly over the "wall" between the label's and comic's portion of the inner box, but from what you're saying, it could do that and the comic still couldn't be removed because both are essentially in the same box together, even if there is a wall between them. The reason is that the wall doesn't extend and join with a "ceiling" which would have to be transparent, because I didn't see anything like that. Another shot, a close up of the yellowed edge of the comic, makes it look like the label could, if so motivated, move completely over the comic, or vice versa. I don't see a layer of plastic over them, apart from the hard case which easily lifted from the corner. To me, it looked like, when viewed through the open cover, I was looking at paper, not a plastic cover over the comic. Are you saying that isn't possible?
  9. "As if". It's an important conditional expression. I didn't say it was your intent, but I was inspired to stop buying comics altogether for about 24 months or so. I was making up for lost time, but am feeling inspired again. You don't get all the credit though. Getting back to this thread, what do you think of the situation with Zaneglor? It's beginning to look like this incident won't have any long-lasting impact on the hobby at all, and any losses suffered by collectors will be minimal.
  10. Anyway, this is totally off-track now. My apologies, it wasn't my intent. RMA has a fantastic but risable talent for tweaking me (and others, apparently). Not a skill I'd be proud of, but it is undeniable. In other news, anything happening in the Zaneglor cases? I'm glad to hear owners of tampered slabs will finally be getting compensation, though now I wonder how that will be determined. From CGC's perspective, it would be very easy to lowball collectors, and from the collector's perspective, almost any offer could be construed as lowball. This would recommend a higher settlement from CGC where there is no requirement to do it. Hence, the dramatic tension created by the situation. It seems to me that the individuals who bought from Zaneglor could have actions against Zaneglor even if compensated by CGC because they were inconvenienced, placed in jeopardy (if they had sold tampered holders), and may have lost opportunities to sell at higher than the settlement price. In some cases where a buyer is duped, they can be attacked as incautious for buying something at a price so good that they didn't look carefully at what they were buying. That doesn't seem to be the case here, because the comics were won at auction, meaning, highest possible price. They weren't overlooking defects to save money here.