• When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.

Roger66

Member
  • Posts

    1,334
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Roger66

  1. RULES & DETAILS Asking price is $-------- via PayPal prefer to trade this for a low grade CGC'd X-MEN #1 blue label (preferably a 3.0 and I would add money on my end if needed of course). There are no returns on this CGC'd book. The case is clean and tight with no blemishes. Shipping would be Priority and fully insured with tracking to follow in the continental USA only for $25.00. If you are outside CONUS please contact me first via PM for shipping price to you. Also only PM me (no public comments please) if you have any questions, offers or gratuitous statements to make. I can send you more photos too if requested. P.S. I was PM'd about my interest in any other keys for possible trade and my answer is yes to a CGC graded HULK181, FF5, FF48, Showcase 22 and JIM83 (and we can PM prices and trade values w additional moneys needed on any such key). TALES OF SUSPENSE #39 CGC 1.5 Cream / Off-White pages (read the cgc blue label notes regarding the TAPE etc).
  2. I would hazard to guess if you sampled enough solid comic book collectors Wolverine would be on average a top 10 favorite character if not close to a top 5 thus IF Wolverine appeared in the Silver Age it would IMO be an easy top 10 SA key by value for sure. However I would assume as result of it being a Silver Age Key in your hypothetical it would thus have less on the census, clearly less in higher-grades too and keeping with how iconic and classic Hulk 181's cover is - I would assume if it had the same iconic looking cover and say for an example it was the cover of a late 60's issue of Tales To Astonish, which usually had Hulk on the front cover - than it could conceivably be considered between 5 and 10 in a most valuable Silver Age key... but only after AF15, Showcase 4, Hulk 1, TOS39, FF1 and maybe JIM83 IMO...
  3. Again I received another excellent premium book from Rick. RickNeatsStuff is a Mount Everest of integrity, character and fine taste in comics. thank you Rick.....
  4. Roger66

    WW 200 For Under $200

    Love this cover. Almost doesn't deserve the 'comic code authority' stamp. As far as a "good dollar/points ratio" I am not sure what that means or if I even want to know . I rarely look at GPA or past sales anymore on a book I simply want to or have to own. Also a book is only 'worth' what someone is willing to pay for it.
  5. Asking Price: $4,200.00 Punch Comics #13 (1945 Chesler) Grade call: Fine Plus Supple Off-White to White pages. Features Rocketman, Master Key, and Johnny On the Spot. Graveyard cover with Chesler artists listed on tombstone Seller's Notes: Glossy clean front cover. Interior-side covers are white. Front cover has some spine ticks with minor paper loss on bottom of spine. Back cover has minor edge tears along with a chip piece hanging on top edge. Staples are dull and clean. Very supple, very solid and very tight throughout. This thick comic is 100% complete with no restoration whatsoever.
  6. Asking Price: $1,500.00 Wonder Comics #7 (1946 Better Pub.) Grade: Fine Plus-Plus / Supple White pages. Alex Schomburg cover. 9 currently graded on the CGC census. Seller's Notes: There's a very small chip with the corresponding paper hanging off spine next to the W in the title. There are slight trace rust spots on the centerfold staples. Bottom of back cover's left corner has what feels like a bit of white paint / residue. A glossy, clean, tight and sharp cornered comic with supple white pages. This comic is 100% complete with no restoration whatsoever.
  7. Asking Price: $1,600.00 Fox Giants Burning Romances (Fox Feature Syndicates,1949) Grade call: Fine/Very Fine Supple Off-White to White pages Gerber "scarce". 132 Pages Notes: Supple, tight, solid and glossy. Sweet looking square bound spine. Light wear on both covers. This thick comic is 100% complete with no restoration whatsoever.
  8. Rules 1. Paypal accepted. 2. Free Priority insured shipping within the continental US "only" with tracking #; IF international, please contact me first via PM before buying. 3. The first "I WILL TAKE IT" in the thread wins over private negotiations with payment expected within 3 days unless we agree on a payment plan 1st. 4. No one on the probation list. 5. Returns accepted on all my raw books within 3 days of your receipt (I will pay your return shipping too) but no returns on graded books. I pack like a pro. 6. Any questions or comments please do so via a PM (private message). I prefer no clutter here. 7. I am open to trades if you have early Silver Age Marvel or DC keys (contact me via PM for specifics). thank you, Roger p.s. I sell on eBay under the name "Kaizerdawg" 100% positive feedback. --------------------------------------------------- Asking Price: $7,700.00 MARVEL FAMILY # 1 (1945 Fawcett) CGC 5.5 Fine Minus - Off-White to White Pages I acquired this raw and submitted it. It was pressed. There is a small spine split on the bottom. Photos pre-grading included. Minty clean case.
  9. My question is, would it be better to just sell the whole collection, or find the ones that are probably the most valuable, like a #1 Amazing Spiderman, #1 FF and sell them separately. Also, for the most valuable ones, how do I know if it would be worth it to have them graded by CGC? I first would find the ones that have the most value aka "the keys." which often are first appearances and/or the first issue in a long running title. If you think or discover via research that a comic is worth more than $500 I would not sell it raw but simply send it in for grading to CGC (you can call them when ready - they are very helpful and the only company I would ever use btw). Comics can also be pressed to sometimes improve the grade, which is a separate discussion (but look it up - pressing comics). To help determine worth you can look at Heritage Auction past sales for said keys, do an advanced search on eBay for that particular book in the sold section as well as look around at various dealers online to gauge demand and value or visit a comic convention. Don't ever feel pressured to sell your keys to anyone let alone to the first person who makes you an offer. Look around, do your research and due dligence and only sell when you are ready to. Good luck and have fun doing it.
  10. ALEX is top-notch. I look forward (very much so) to his next sale's thread on the Boards. Thank you again for the raw FF.