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Pat Thomas

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Everything posted by Pat Thomas

  1. If this is a dealer who has listed the comics for sale, you have every right to expect a timely response. There's a big difference between somebody making their living selling comics and somebody selling on the side. I would be concerned that they would also take their own sweet time shipping, and God forbid you have a problem. Unless you don't think you'll ever see these prices again from another seller, I wouldn't waste any more of my time with this guy. You obviously aren't a priority to him.
  2. I'm in the same place, and I'm liquidating my collection. My lcs closed down in 2019, and the disruption of my Weds routine after so many years affected my enthusiasm after they were gone a few months. I considered the guys as friends, and they took care of me. I tried keeping a pull list at the other 2 nearby shops, but they couldn't seem to get it right, leaving gaps in all the current titles I collect. That kind of soured me on collecting new titles, and the majority of comics on my want list are the most expensive ones. The passion isn't really there, to be honest. What I am passionate about is the state of the back issue market now and second generation Z28's and Trans Ams. With just a portion of the money I should make selling them, I'm going to buy a couple of cars and build a detached garage/shop/pool house. The money I've been spending on comics will go into buying or fixing up additional cars instead. Might even buy some real estate, too. I'll be 55 in 2 days and still get around ok, but I'm running out of time to do stuff like this. If you want to sell your comics and do something else that gives you more pleasure now, I say go ahead.
  3. Don't any of you remember when the whole comic book hobby was new to you, or you rediscovered it after years away? Joe Peck hasn't become jaded yet like most everybody else, and he's enthusiastic about building his new collection. Every one of you should know where he is coming from, and that the honeymoon phase doesn't last forever. I guarantee if he's still here in a year, he will be as sour as the rest of us. There needs to be new blood on these boards, but nobody likes to spend time on a forum being criticized for nit-picky bs by people with nothing better to do.
  4. I'll use USPS for sending comics almost exclusively, but they have lost more of my sent packages and incoming packages than the other two combined. Just last November, I received notifications from them for 3 packages left on my front porch. When I went to get them, the porch was empty. It couldn't have been more than 2 minutes, and there aren't thieves hiding in the bushes year round waiting for packages to steal. I've received so many envelopes with addresses similar to mine since I moved here 5 years ago, so I know they deliver to the wrong address regularly. They have never solved any missing shipments coming to me. But USPS did find longboxes of comics I sent out 3 different instances in 2020/21, and made the deliveries. Neither Fed Ex or UPS has ever fixed any problem I've had, so I won't use them on principle. That leaves USPS as my best option, and that is just ludicrous. Thanks for allowing me to express that. The whole situation infuriates me and I'm helpless as a consumer that keeps having things stolen for over 5 years now.
  5. Honestly, I think MCS grades tightly, but I don't think they purposely assign lower grades. They have a reputation of being fair and honest in their grading process that's been earned over about 40 years (or more). The majority of their back issues come from regular customers using the sell/trade option on the website. I've sold thousands of comics to them, and it's actually as common for them to adjust my grade up as it is to adjust it down. They also guarantee that the grade they assign the comics at time of purchase is the grade it sells at. In this day and age, a company that practices good customer service and does things with honesty and integrity "just because" has become a rarity. I was always taught to give my best at work and to do what I could (within reason) to satisfy any customer, and that was pretty much the standard everywhere. When somebody is helpful or fair now, a customer is more likely to be suspicious of being scammed instead of appreciative. You should expect that from MCS every time, though.
  6. There is also Covrprice, but they are still really new. The longer they are around gathering sales data, the more accurate they should be. It's worth a look if you haven't ever.
  7. One day you will get to scold a newbie to the boards, too.
  8. The company that shall not be named offers a tier where they will grade the comic for you and put it in a tamper-free mylar bag with an official grade label on front. I've considered it because some people only consider a comic to be worthy is for a minimum wage line worker at a grading company to say so, and it's much cheaper than slabbing. But I never have.
  9. I actually prefer raw comics, but there have been some deals that were too good to pass on already slabbed, and I just left them as is. I might have 30 totals slabs, and I actually have 4 submitted now (some ASM that I think are exceptional copies). Depending on how they turn out, I might send in some more. The prices of high grade keys almost necessitate having them professionally graded, especially Silver Age and older. If I decide to cash out, I estimate I'll have 500 or more to slab. I've got some decisions to make soon. I'm not getting any younger. To answer your other questions; I used to read every comic I bought, and sometimes ran out of reading material between purchases. Then my life got turned upside down when I went through a divorce and moved out of the house I owned originally into an apartment. Between the stress of starting over with only my dog, my car, clothes, and comics, and dealing with my ex, it got where I could no longer concentrate enough to immerse myself in the stories. When I could relax enough to read, I would doze off after a few pages. I figured it would pass, but it hasn't really. It's become more about acquiring since and keeping them straight. I'll try to remember to take some pictures of my setup and post them in the other thread if it isn't too complicated.
  10. I started off wanting to get complete runs of Avengers and Amazing Spider-Man, primarily because it was a goal I had attempted 40 years ago, and went about as far as a kid with very limited income could. I was able to get issues #100 and up for each title, and some of the pre-100 issues, but hit a wall there. When I started back collecting in 2011, I actually had money to realistically pursue my goals. For the first 3 years, I concentrated mainly on those two titles, but I also was buying runs and particular issues of other titles I remembered. It took me a little over 3 years to finish my 2 primary titles, about 6 months apart. I was happy to have done it and felt a sense of accomplishment, but also a sort of emptiness since I hadn't planned beyond that. So I kind of went crazy. I started working on other titles I had accumulated issues of like X-Men and FF, along with the satellite Avengers and Spider-Man titles. That expanded to Hulk, Thor, Iron Man, Captain America, Daredevil, and tons of Marvel titles 10-200 issues long. Eventually, I started on the Superman and Batman titles, Flash, Justice League, etc. Most of the stuff on my want list now is DC Silver Age and older. I've accepted that I'll probably never complete the Golden Age portions of those titles, but I do buy what I can. I still need FF 1 & 52, Journey Into Mystery 84 & 85, Hulk 1-6, TOS 39, and AF 15. I might not ever get those either, but you never know what each new day brings. I've thought about selling everything and building a detached garage / pool house and a couple of cars to work on. I've always wanted a 10th Anniversary Silver Trans Am to restore and a place to do it.
  11. Did the same in 1986. I kept some of the premiere books in my collection to hold "for the rest of my life". Then, after my first week of classes at Auburn, I made the stupid decision to drive late Friday night after a keg party, and got a DUI. Had to sell the rest of my comics to pay my fines. There were some good ones in there, too: GSXM1, X-Men 94, Hulk 181, Avengers 2-10, and the prettiest copies I've ever seen of ASM 48-60.
  12. All I know it when Marvel hired him, the original characters started returning to their titles, and Marvel Now was out.
  13. What a strange decision. Warlock is supposed to be perfect, not goofy.
  14. Just scroll down the first page after you sign in. Sign up for their newsletter whether you join or not, and you'll get the top ten percentagewise increases emailed every week (plus 10 runners up), and you'll also get a weekly email about noteworthy sales the previous week and why they might have occurred. It fascinates me too, and I'm slowly getting all my comics into their database, but I just have so many (and I'm a perfectionist too). I'm a little over halfway finished, so I'll be lucky to finish this year.
  15. Do you ever follow Covrprice.com? All their data comes from genuine sales across multiple platforms, and they post high sellers in volume as well as dollars every day, along with 2 feature articles about the week's market every week.
  16. Facsimile copies are just the newest method scammers have latched onto. Doesn't CGC exist basically because people learned how to fix their damaged comics to avoid detection after they realized comics were becoming something people collected and were willing to pay for? Yes, it would be hard for a newbie to detect a lot of the tricks being used today, but the investing side of this hobby isn't for just anybody. I love comics, and I have since I was introduced to them over 40 years ago. It wasn't long after I started collecting Avengers and Amazing Spider-Man as a kid that I realized they needed to be cared for because they could hold value. But I bought them for the stories. The only difference was that I handled them more delicately. But the stories were what drew me in, and in the case of Marvel, want to learn about the other characters and back issues referenced in every issue. By default, all that exploration gave me enough knowledge to serve as a foundation when I came back into the hobby after long, long periods away. The latest as a 25-year layoff, but I never felt lost as I discovered what happened in all that time. With the experience I had in the past buying back issues, I knew there were things to look out for. Back in the day (and still today), a dealer could pass off a Marvel Tales reprint of ASM as the ASM of that number. I see people today pulling that with Fantasy Masterpieces and Silver Surfer, which actually have the same issue numbers. But somebody who has put in the time and knows this hobby won't fall for these things. The scammers have always been there. Now they have much more visibility. People can invest how they want, and if some insufficiently_thoughtful_person wants to spend thousands of dollars on a comic that a knowledgeable collector could spot in a second, who's problem is that? It's not because ebay is awful, or the hobby is ruined. It's because some fool wants to get rich quick without learning the product, and there are always plenty of dishonest jerks willing to take money from fools.
  17. I've used CGC in the past for one book at a time. However, this time I want to send in 4. My packing slip is broken down into 3 tiers: 2 in Standard, 1 in Fast Track Economy, and 1 in Express. Can I mail the Standard and Economy in the same package? I'm also assuming the Express will need to be separate due to the markings you require on the shipping box. Am I correct in my assessments? And should I print a duplicate list to go with it? Thanks
  18. If you stacked about 50 lgngboxes nose to tail (approx 28" each), that would probably be somewhere in the range of my "to read" pile. 1400" inches tall, or 116.7 ft. stack of comics.
  19. I got back into collecting in 2010, after a 25 year layoff. I was surprised that most of the comics I remembered from my youth were still available at relatively decent prices. Fortunately I had a lot of money to put towards comics, so I built the "foundation" of my collection in the first two years. Around 2013, I decided to enter my entire collection into mycomicshop.com's selling database. As I was entering them, I noticed a good portion of my comics were already receiving offers that were more than I paid for them. In some cases, a lot more. I've been doing that ever since whenever I add to my collection, and I can say without a doubt that prices across the board have only been going up the entire time. Putting my comics in that database is what sparked my interest in following the market, but that's not the only resource I follow. The point is that whatever source you use shows the market is going one direction. On every message board I've participated, there have been people warning of the impending crash, and that the prices are too high to sustain. So far, we haven't reached that point. When Avengers exploded in 2012, these incredible characters and stories most of us love were exposed to the entire world. And people all over the world loved it. People all over the world also had easy access to collect if they wanted, through ebay and other websites. So now even comics with millions of copies pale in comparison to the billions of people potentially wanting to collect them. It truly is a whole new game now. I don't know about anybody else, but I love the fact that right now, I could sell just a portion of my collection and buy a new Corvette. I would've never imagined that.
  20. They provide that info to you after they receive, grade, and scan your comics. Shows all sales via their stock, set-price consignment, and auctions from at least 12 months back.
  21. I have the benefit of an entire finished basement with a large bar / recreational area and 2 large bedrooms where my comics are. I've also been retire for almost 10 years, so I really don't have any limits on the time I can spend buying, cataloging, organizing, or occasionally reading comics. I learned my lesson about letting them pile up years ago, so it's rare that I have much more than a shortbox to put up. I just stay on top of it. In addition to my collection, I used to always have 3-4,000 doubles and other stuff I ended up with in their own area and catalogued in the MCS database. I used those for trade credit with MCS when I was able to work up about $100 worth, and I used the credit for my collection. In 2018, my lcs shut the doors. I had purchased 10 longboxes of mixed stuff for cheap already, but the owner called me late on their last day with approx 75 shortboxes for $5 apiece that had to be out of the building that night, so I told him I would take them. There ended up being even more there, but he told me to take everything for the amount we had already agreed on (plus I ended up getting 5 comic book shelve units that have a top level divided into 6 rows with transparent plastic in front and 2 lower levels that each hold 6 longboxes, for $100 apiece), I ended up with about 12,000 comics in total disarray to organize, catalog, and then blend in with the other MCS trade stock. It took me probably 6 months to get it mostly finished. I didn't get up every day and work on comics all day. Some days I might spend 6-8 hours working on the project, but mostly I would work on them a couple of hours when the mood struck. A lot of days I didn't work on them at all. But I developed a system to get the individual boxes organized and add them to the database. As I entered them, I pulled whatever books MCS wanted to buy, and move on to another box. After I got 5 or so longboxes accumulated, I phased them into my stock. It was a job, but I finished it. I've done over $20,000 in trades with that stock so far, and I'm just now getting back down to my normal stock level. I would love to do another one soon.
  22. According to their newsletter this week, Buddy had a stroke over the weekend. I believe it was considered to be a mild one, but there's no such thing as a harmless stroke. He should be able to get mostly back to normal with rehab over time, but his son, Conan, said Buddy has decided to go ahead and retire. From what I've seen from Conan, he is very sharp, but MCS is the way it is because of Buddy. I do believe Conan is responsible for the awesome, user-friendly website, though.
  23. I bought a display rack from my old lcs when they closed down, and I display my slabs on them. That way it feels like they have their own place dictated by me (instead of being a necessity). I've just learned to deal with the empty slot in the box.