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John E.

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Everything posted by John E.

  1. If you owned Twitter then you’d be the one consigning the art just to keep the lights on.
  2. I’m glad USPS found your parcel. I wasn’t keeping up with your thread so I’m late to chime in. When my packages go in limbo it’s a once-every-two years occurrence. When it does, I file a “search” request online and the package is usually found within 48 hours. The post office will look high and low for it before they pay up in insurance, so the chances of them finding it after they’ve paid a claim is pretty low. When you cash their check you are pretty much agreeing that the item belongs to them, if they wish to have it. That’s all in their fine print when you file a claim. Unless I’m misreading what you wrote, USPS will only pay you or the shipper, whoever is filing the claim, but not both. And when you file, you are also under oath(?) that you have not received any other insurance money for the item. So you can’t double dip with PayPal or collectibles insurance. Lastly, you need banking proof, like a bank statement or PayPal to prove what you paid, so someone can provide you an invoice saying you paid one bajillion dollars but it doesn’t mean anything to USPS unless you provide proof with a bank statement. Just thought I’d shed some light for anyone else who may have questions about filing claims.
  3. I had read on another thread that CLink had jacked up the shipping cost by double on a U.S. buyer/Boardie here, and their art wasn’t even that high of value. He called them and asked them what was up with that and CLink relented and charged them at the regular shipping rate. It may be worth calling them ahead of time to make sure you get charged a fair rate although I know that puts an extra step and burden on your part.
  4. Then there’s $2,626 for this:
  5. This is my fifth Comic Art Live (out of 6) that I’ve sold in. I didn’t hit my sales goal, but that’s okay. Still what I like about the event is that it prods collectors who usually don’t sell, to sell. And it’s nice seeing a lot fresh-to-market art. I noticed that a lot of sellers who participated in 2020 who brought some great stuff at reasonable prices were absent this time around. Whatever the case may be for that, personally, all my inventory was wiped out by the third show. By the fourth show, I brought out small sketches and all my sales were under $100. This is to say that I didn’t see a lot of vintage art coming out of black holes this time around. A lot of what I saw that was overpriced were commissions and new art bought & overpaid from an art rep. I don’t know…I wish I had the evidence to prove it…but it seems to me a lot of the art offered is art recently acquired, maybe last last 2-3 years, likely bought at close- to full market, and so it’s sold at 100%-150% at current market just to make it worthwhile. Because bottomline is that most of us don’t want to take a bath on it. But no one actually hangs on to their art long enough to let it “naturally” increase in value.
  6. With two hours to go, 541 out of 6,074 piece of art sold. Sheesh. Collectors really sat this one out. I’m interested to see what Bill saw on his side of the screen.
  7. Does he still have it and is he still an active collector? (Not sure how long ago this get-together happened.)
  8. What fun to see all those Joe Quesada Origin covers come up. Origin holds quite a bit of nostalgia for me for one of my reading phases. It certainly was a one of the biggest “Event” books at the turn of the century. I wonder what they could have fetched had they been inked? The result on that DKIII book was surprising to me too. This is how I explain the result. Keep in mind that my memory may have faltered. I believe that particular DKIII book was the 1:5000 Jim Lee sketch variant. I believe at the time of the release those were fetching $5,000 in the raw. So combine the overall rarity with a 9.8 grade and obviously verified, then you get a crazy hammer price. I’m not sure how that book was witnessed since it should have shipped to stores, but I guess there’s always a way. So, me guesses the appeal is the confirmed rarity (a 1 in 5,000 book) over quantity of the art.
  9. [CLOSED] Paper Girls #1, near mint in raw. I will ship USPS 1st class mail for free! I am the original owner. I purchased this from DCBS way back during the presale. It arrived bagged and boarded. It has never been cracked open. Please see pics! The first takes it! Will also be helpful if you PM me!!!
  10. And you're likely right. Any idea what the bidding increments look like at $1.6M? I guess this can be easily looked up. I do recall from Halperin's first interview with Felix that Jim said Heritage employees were allowed to bid on lots but they weren't allowed to bid live, bids had to be put in before. Just thinking that proxy bids kicked in when the auction started.
  11. The only record I have is that on Thursday, June 16, at 8:41am central time, the bid was at $1,625,000 or $1,950,000 with the BP. I watched the auction and in my vague recall of memory, the piece had already hit the $2M mark by the time the live bidding started with no bidding during the auction. What does everyone else remember?
  12. “Youngin’” or “Young Gun?” So, were you 46 when you won the Hulk 180 page? If you show me a paystub, I will quit my job right now and work for you.
  13. Glad to get another Jim Halperin interview. I found him open and honest when confidentiality wasn’t involved. Always interesting to hear dispatches from that side of the hobby. Love hearing that comic art is more of a collector’s hobby, not a speculator’s.
  14. And that doesn't include the stuff he's recently sold.
  15. A Tale of Two Collectors Them: The market is collapsing Us: Just got a bangin’ deal
  16. ⬇️ THIS LOT SOLD! SEE NEXT! I am selling a full run of Paper Girls #1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, & 10. This represents the first two arcs of the series. I am the original owner. I purchased these from Discount Comic Book Service and arrived bagged and boarded. These were gently read once, so I'd say they are NM- or better. Asking [SOLD] + $9.25 shipping. Shipping: $9.25 for Priority Mail shipping. My local P.O. has popped me for shipping comics Media Mail so I can't do anything other than Priority. I ship within 48 hours. Books shipped in a box with two books per bag 'n' board to reduced size and weight. Payment: PayPal G&S. Venmo and Zelle also available. No Returns. Sale goes to the first
  17. There’s not a lot of traffic here over the weekend, so let me sum up what happened for the latecomers: 🏝Y t-w-a-t
  18. I, for one, was appreciative of this pun, but I didn’t want to react to it because things couldn’t have gotten more tense even if you had put Mr White and Mr Blonde in the same room.
  19. Dispatcher: 9-1-1. What is your emergency? Caller: Shots fired! Dispatcher: What is your location? Caller: Um, um, CGC Boards, original art. I’m at the “List anything historic” thread. I don’t know ma’am! Across the street from the OA Marketplace! Dispatcher: Is anyone hurt, sir? Caller: They got J.J. and Marcus, and Race. They even shot the deputy. Hurry! Please! Dispatcher: As in Marcus Wai? Caller: Yes Chef! Dispatcher: Keep him stable with a limerick. Help is on the way.
  20. Apparently, it sold. Don’t feed the flipper, man
  21. I find this very interesting. I have a small collection of Punisher pages but I’d never display them. I also don’t buy violent kill pages with human viscera or pages that show violence or sexual assault against women.
  22. Michael Walsh sells his pages on his website on average for $200-$250. I’d say given the content and Spidey, that’s pretty fmv, esp. if that was an auction win.
  23. I believe you’re right. Now I find it an interesting coincidence these popped up back to back. I just looked up the eBay description. Says “blue pencils” and ink. If I didn’t know what I was buying, I would assume I’m buying the one and only original. I think this is what clouded me into thinking they were the same page. And this is why I stay away from modern art.