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StuporMan

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Everything posted by StuporMan

  1. Not when the number of flippers of issue one exceed the number of buyers of current issues, but the number of people buying number one for four figures. Might be sooner than you think. Not everybody that buys the compendium is even remotely interested in owning a thousand dollar comic. Good point. $1000 issues take a lot of the fans out of the market. I don't see many old school collectors dropping that kind of coin for a new series when they can pick up some relatively rare bronze age keys in 9.8 for that $$$.
  2. When the # of flippers exceeds the # of fans buying books - watch the prices fall since they're looking for a quick $ and get desperate. I don't see any signs of that happening yet. If Chew gets made and spinoffs make it to TV, it will only add fuel to the fire. Still, not buying at the prices - I guess I missed the boat.
  3. Hugo is way scarier than that evil clown from Poltergeist.
  4. Same guy at it again with a new account: Armand Sahakian block eBay ID: hvgs24 The tool even ADMITTED that he tried to bid with his blocked account and created this one to skirt around it: "hi there! hey, sorry i've been mia the last week, but i had a family emergency that involved lawyers. /.../ btw... i'm not new to ebay, but you had blocked bidders with 2 unpaids in the last 12 months and i was afraid that i wouldn't get a hold of you in time to unblock me before the auction ended so i bid on this account. thanks again! regards, armen"
  5. Overstreet grading guide sez highest 3.0 G/VG for book-length creases. CGC defines the crease as "Subscription Crease. A large crease down the center of a comic book caused by the folding of a comic for mailing. Considered a defect." I can't find an example of a CGC book with a near book length crease that was over a 3.5.
  6. I found restoration on one comic (after it was graded ) that didn't show with a blacklight - but did show when I tweaked a photo of it in Photoshop. I set the brightness to 100% and contrast to -100% and it was clear as day: marker used to fill in some creases along the spine. Amateur night resto!
  7. General questions about how others go about building their sets. Being new to the CGC community I was wondering how the more seasoned set builders approach their collecting. I just started with a few sets with only a couple issues, knowing that I have more to add when my books arrive graded from CGC. When you collect, do you pay attention to completing a set or to points? Or do you just collect what you want and if you build a nice set, more power to it... Also, since page quality doesn't appear to be calculated into the set scoring from what I can tell... do you concern yourself with getting the best possible page quality? I've noticed that higher page quality can fetch a 10% to 50% premium - worth it? The same can be said for pedigrees as well. Also wondering if anyone out there lets the point value of the book influence what price they'll pay for a book. Take for example a Captain Marvel 9.8 offered for $350, but only scores 120 pts - would you still pay that price? I'm new to this, so any advice from seasoned set builders would be appreciated - thanks for reading! To see old comments for this Journal entry, click here. New comments can be added below.
  8. USPS will ship packing supplies for free (boxes, bubble mailers, stickers, forms etc)- you can order straight from their website and they will drop it at your door. I also cut up the free boxes and use them to protect shipments that go into padded mailers. eBay will also send you branded USPS boxes for free although the selection isn't as good as the USPS website. That reminds me...time to order supplies
  9. I knew a guy who worked at a FedEx sort facility that would *purposely* damage boxes that said "fragile" or "handle with care" - I thought he was fired, but it looks like he was transferred instead...
  10. Long time collector and CGC slabber, first time writing. Hello CGC community. I have been collecting since 1985, around the age of 10. I read mainly Superman and Spiderman comics purchased from the Circle K, Bashas or TG&Y - all within a short bike ride. I don't have any of my comics from my youth because I read them and basically threw them in a corner - so sad. A few years later I got into collecting and took better care of my comics. My first purchase as a collector with money made from a paper route was Amazing Spider-Man #129 for $10. It looked like it was used as a placemat - but the first appearance of the Punisher was mine, all mine! I collected mainly Marvel comics (didn't everyone else?) until the late 80s. In my early teens my tastes changed and I started to read a lot of Anime/Manga; I was a HUGE Akira fan. As a collector I started to focus on cheap, low-grade keys. I used Comic Price Guide Monthly for comic book values. In the early 90s I started to collect Valiant comics and was a faithful reader of Wizard magazine around issue 5 (the one with the Sam Keith Hulk Cover?) I never used the Wizard price guide, but I liked their top 10 hot comics and their segments on collecting. I also discovered the Overstreet price guide and realized that there was a golden age of comics that I never knew existed - All monthly comic book price guides that I read started at the silver age. Image comics came on the scene around that time and I was hooked. I stopped collecting around the mid-90s after the market seemed saturated. A new #1 issue with 4 different holographic chromium fold-out covers was coming out every week. I felt like I was getting fleeced. I took a decade long break from collecting. I started again in 2005 - after lugging my 4 long boxes with me move after move, I decided to revisit what those boxes contained. I was surprised at the instant nostalgic feelings from looking at my old collection again. Also surprised that all those #1s from the 90s were worthless Oh well, collect and learn.... This was also the year that I bought my first CGC graded comic book. I like what CGC does for the comic industry and continue to have my comics graded to this day. Thanks for reading my trip down memory lane. Please comment if you have similar experiences to share - I'd be interested to read them. To see old comments for this Journal entry, click here. New comments can be added below.