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RCheli

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Posts posted by RCheli

  1. Sugar and Spike is a great series, and its got good value, but the pool of people looking for it is pretty small.

     

    The same goes for some of the more valuable genre titles of the Golden/Silver Age.

     

    The St. John's Romance Giants are highly collectable... but not by a lot of collectors. They have high value, but put it in front of 100 collectors, and maybe 1 or 2 will care. Same goes for Sugar and Spike.

  2. The first comic shop I ever went to was Cap's Comics Cavalcade, which was in Kutztown, Pennsylvania. (About a half hour west of Allentown.) It was 1984, and they had everything. I was able to buy about a dozen Daredevils from the 30s and 40s, all in pretty great condition, for a buck or two each.

     

    Later on, Third Street Comics Emporium opened in Easton (a little closer to home), which became Mr. Monster's Comic Crypt. That was a pretty bad shop. Beachhead opened in Allentown, which was run by a surly guy. The last time I was there, about a decade ago, he still wasn't accepting credit cards. Cash only.

     

    Finally, in 1985, Dreamscape Comics opened in my hometown of Bethlehem, and I was one of the first few customers. Within a few months I was working there, and I worked and shopped there off and on for the next 15 years. The owner passed away suddenly a couple of years ago (probably the fittest comic shop owner on the planet -- the antithesis of Comic Book Guy) at a pretty young age, and it's barely hanging on (they don't get new books any more -- just selling their old stock, open a few days a week).

     

    I haven't been back in a looooong time. But it's sad to know what it's become (and what it had become in the last 5 or so years the owner was alive -- a little too much "Hoarder" happening, if you know what I mean).

  3. Joe Sarno would've done a lot better sales wise near the end if he started ordering trade paperbacks. He was so against them -- he only wanted to sell the individual comics. Very nice guy. He and Larry Charet were the deans of comic book stores in the city. Larry's Comics -- which closed right around the same time as Joe Sarno's -- was up on Devon on the far north side of Chicago. To say that it was dirty is an understatement. I didn't move here until 2001, so I didn't see either shop in their heyday.

  4. So, I heard back from my guy.

     

    As expected, he backed out of the deal citing medical issues. I expected some sort of excuse and was actually betting it was going to be medical because it's impossible to prove and forces you to be sympathetic. Now you guys know me, and I'm generally a bleeding heart but I sometimes have a hard time believing someone using 'medical issues' as an excuse when

     

    1) they post on the chat forums the entire time PMs are going unanswered

    2) they finally reply after you threaten them with public exposure

     

    BTW, I suffer from the same 'medical issues' as this person.

     

    Thoughts?

    Is this where we provide thoughts/guesses on the medical issue you both share?

     

    I'm guessing something with a Pringles can... :D

  5. With an increase in auctions on the board, is it time to maybe consider an auction sub-forum with a few rules.

    One rule being one auction thread at a time per member and a maximum number of books (say 20).

     

    2c? We don't have sense cents in Canada anymore so my nickel's worth.

     

    Thoughts?

     

    I was thinking the same thing.

     

    Also, I'm surprised at some of the recent auctions for books that, while cool, aren't really very uncommon or high grade or particularly worthwhile.

  6. Went to a toy and collectible store I know and found these at $4.00 each. I gotta love my fanzines. (thumbs u

     

    100_2308_zpsed7f7284.jpg

     

    Everyone -- and I mean EVERYONE -- has a Heroes, Inc. #1. Not many people have a #2.

     

    (Honestly, if you're a comic collector/dealer and you don't own a copy of Heroes, Inc. #1, I'm sure there is somebody with a case that would be willing to hand over one to you.)

  7. Boy, this seems like bad practice: http://boards.collectors-society.com/ubbthreads.php?ubb=showflat&Number=8105429#Post8105429

     

    ...setting up an auction and declaring an ending time (i.e., 10 PM Central tonight), and then shutting things down early because of "no interest".

     

    Seems like once one commits to an auction structure with time parameters, it needs to run its course...perhaps someone was contemplating a bid and was waiting until after work, or something.... (shrug)

     

    I saw that.

     

    Of course, mid-grade, non-key (for the most part) late Silver Thors aren't the biggest draw.

  8. Some have said Kane really never drew any of Batman besides rough sketches and hiring others to draw it up for him. I know all his convention sketches look like an 8 year old drew them so maybe there's some truth to this. He's one of the most forged artists because who cant draw at the 8 year old level???

     

    That's absolutely not true.

     

    Kane was a pretty dreadful artist, that's for sure. But he was drawing comics for National for at least two years before he created Batman, and I doubt that he was already having ghost artists before he even became a name for himself.

     

    I doubt if Kane drew more than 20 Batman stories in his life, though. He didn't seem like a very good person in the least, but he was a smart businessman. In a time where creators were regularly mess upon, he managed to get and keep his name on his creation for 75 years. He was able to package a specific amount of pages every month for National, thereby giving him an income and allowing him to reap the benefits of Batman.

     

    The same couldn't be said -- in their lifetime -- for Siegel and Shuster, Simon and Kirby, Hibbard, Beck, Burgos, Everett, etc.

  9. Although not one of the oldest by any means, I remember when a comic shop (Dreamscape Comics) opened up in my hometown when I was 13 (this would be 1985).

     

    Anyway, I found out about it because I was coming back from some school trip and the bus was stopped at a light at Broad and Third Avenue in Bethlehem, and I looked out the window and I thought I saw a sign that said "comics". I couldn't be sure, but after school that day, I hopped on my bike and rode the 2 miles to the store.

     

    The thing I remember about it was that it was a cold autumn day, and when I walked into the warm store, my glasses immediately fogged up. The happiest moment of my life was suddenly delayed because I couldn't see!

     

    Anyway, I eventually started working there and became very good friends with the owner. Comicstock from the boards (Jim) bought into the business about 5 years later and was part-owner for a few years.

     

    Nick, the owner, died two years ago very unexpectedly. He was relatively young and in great health. The store had gone downhill over the past decade, and I hadn't been there much since I moved to Chicago, but I will always remember the good times.

     

    The Lehigh Valley had a few shops that opened up in the 80s.

     

    There was Cap's Comics Cavalcade that first opened in Kutztown and then moved to Allentown.

     

    Third Street Comics Emporium in Easton (which was renamed Mr. Monster's Comic Crypt).

     

    There was Beachhead Comics in Allentown (which was an interesting place to say the least).

     

    Many others opened up in the 90s and later, but those were the oldest that I knew of.

  10. So... if anyone ever suspects my stuff of being overgraded, I'd much rather them send me a PM than me look like a fool.

     

    Everyone makes mistakes. I often grade stuff when I get it, put a post-if on the bag with the grade and any major defects, and then don't look/think about them again until I sell them, and I've overgraded some things (and probably undergraded some, too).

     

    But I'd much rather someone -- anyone -- just send me a message that says, "I think that you're a little high on the Action #1 you have up. It looks like a FN and you've got a NM. What gives?"

     

    Now, I'm not saying that I have something at VF and you think it might be a VF-...

     

    But I'd rather be a trusted seller that has to swallow their ego and downgrade a book than have one where people won't buy from because they think the stuff isn't the grade advertised.

  11. That's a good point, I hadn't thought of it that way. It is only a 4.5, so I figured it's not exactly a pristine cover and the plan for this book is to help fund my son's schooling when he's 18, so I thought the signature would make sense from an investment standpoint. I love the cover as well, do you think it will degrade the value?

     

    I am biased because I don't like signatures on the cover of comics, so take this with a grain of salt...

     

    I would never have Lee or anyone sign this book. There are plenty of other keys out there that Lee worked on that would be a better option.

     

    You are limiting who will want to buy this in the future, and Lee's signature is just not that uncommon. He's the Pete Rose of the comic book world.

     

    I would definitely not do it.

  12. At the time, the Legion was the second most popular book DC had. It was one of the first, if not the first, regular series to get the Deluxe format,and it was one of only two DC books that was published twice a month. Not really sure where it all went wrong, but the last dozen reboots have been sad.

     

    I think the Legion really lost their way in the post-Crisis/post-Byrne Superman reboot era. They were no longer as relevant to the DC Universe, as suddenly we had to start explaining who that Superboy was and what was he doing in the future (if there never was a Superboy to begin with).

     

    I've picked it up over the years -- the Great Darkness Saga, the baxter reboot, the Legionnaires (because I love Chris Sprouse's art), but it was just so overly convoluted.