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ESeffinga

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Posts posted by ESeffinga

  1. I definitely appreciate the piece as art for art’s sake for what it is. So much going for it... but one and done? For Kirby? Nah! 

    It does have cool Kirby henchmen and a neat Kirby-tech vehicle going on, but no Kirby crackle??? To me, that’d be the second dealbreaker for a one and done Kirby. Well that and knowing I was going to a c-list Kirby creation to get there, with how much other amazing Kirby is out there.

    As Kirby Kamandi art goes, this is A+++ all the way. As a piece of work from this period, it’s super cool.
     

    If that is someone’s sweet spot for Kirby, maybe this was all they ever really needed (but also how does that even happen? Got to Kamandi and stopped  reading Kirby there?) But IMO, someone that grabs this is doing it more likely as a notch in a belt with other Kirby on hand, or a placeholder/good as they can get for the $. 

    IMO, anybody grabbing this is certainly not “done”. Maybe done with Kamandi... :)
     

  2. I’d be more concerned with ink sticking to the top loaders, but that is just me. I’d have just gone with regular old non-stick Baking sheet/roll from the grocery store. I have a large IKEA coffee table in my reading room with a smooth bottom and a heavy glass top. I like to stick the art under the glass To let it flatten. A few weeks to a few months, depending on how heavy and stubborn the paper and curl are. Most are good within a month.

    But I always tilt and lift that glass top carefully. Don’t want the art to slide on the table or have any dust under the glass that slides against the art surface, risking other kinds of damage.
     

    But yeah, flat piece of heavy glass on a clean flat surface, can work wonders. I don’t bother rotating, since the weight is pretty equally applied to both sides when the thing is flat. Often no muss, no fuss. Just put the work in, and a bit of patience. Even slight kinks and mailing bends can be minimized in this way. It’s not always perfect, but often better than one might think, going in.

    I have a smaller piece of glass I keep on top of a bookshelf in the reading room closet. I can do 11”x17” stuff in there. The coffee table comfortably fits work up to 26” x 30”. It’s helpful when the furniture can do double duty. I just keep all drinks, etc away until it is empty. :)

     

  3. Funny. I was offered that Arak cover privately very recently (I left a comment on CAF about the nostalgia of it in a previous owner’s gallery and they contacted me with a private offer, as they were selling), not sure if this was the same person or a short flip, but I wanna say it they were looking for like $500-750 or something in that range. Somebody did ok.
     

    And the humor of owning that almost made me do it, before returning to my senses. I do remember getting that comic during a summer vacation road trip, and being sprawled out in the back of the station wagon with pillows, as dad was driving the family to wherever we were headed. I think the only Arak book I ever read, and I have no recollection of the interior story at all, but vivid memories in grabbing it off the spinner rack before we left, with 4 or 5 other titles, (ROM, Conan, GI Joe) and looking at it a bunch during the trip. Heh. 

  4. 14 hours ago, Rick2you2 said:

    You should be able to do better with time. A lot of plans these days are only digital. No need for storing the blueprints; no need for cabinets.

    Crappy ones, of course. The one I was referencing is gorgeous, not as massive, and a 3 stack tower. Beautifully finished, and wouldn’t look out of place in a living room or library of a high end home. 

    Ballpark for the run of the mill wood flat files run $300-800 depending on condition, location and the type of file, from what I’ve seen over the years. 

     

  5. Nah. I’d think of that as overthinking it. Plenty of OA was altered during the production process over the years. How many old Marvel pages had pasteovers made of printed stats covering beautiful art underneath? Or the occasional cover that is all stat covering the original drawn art underneath? I don’t think anyone prefers the enlarged stat over seeing the drawing, do they?

    Be jazzed with your piece. Don’t sweat the small production edits. Chances are the writer or editor made the changes after the art was done. Part of making comics. Post it up if/when you can.

  6. Most metal flat files are gigantic, and eat up an acre of floor space. Not practical unless sanded, painted nicely and turned into something like a coffee table in the living room.

    The part about that which always gave me pause when I briefly considered it was, what happens if someone accidentally overturns a drink of the top of the coffee table? :whatthe:

    I hate to be the bearer of bad news, but I don’t have a lot of great suggestions on that front. I’m the guy that doesn’t care to have a lot of stored art anymore, and my collection has evolved to such big pieces they are forced to be stored on the walls. Hahaha.

    My take is this, look around. Watch places like craigslist in your area long term. 
     

    FWIW, that cabinet You lined to, IMO is not bad at all. Think about how much you spend on the stuff that goes in it. That’s “nothing”. 
     

    But watch for letterpress cabinets. Spool cabinets. Smaller map files and blueprint files, etc. I’ve seen some beautiful things done with those. But it also depends on how handy you are. If you can’t do the work yourself, having someone else do it will make that linked cabinet look dirt cheap. ;)
     

     

     

  7. Doesn’t mean he didn’t do it.
     

    As opposed to McFarlane. Who DIDNT do it. I don’t care a whit about Larson. I can still tip my hat to him for the effort.

    And to be fair, somebody is still buying his books. Maybe not you, or me, our any of our friends, but clearly he isn’t doing it for nothing. Must be enough to be worthwhile to him, or he’d throw in the towel.

     

     

  8. I found it entertaining.

    I will always bristle at McFarlane's 300 issue "milestone". Dave Sim might have taken Cerebus to some odd places, and filled issues with diatraibes of increasingly strange nonsense, but he made THE WHOLE THING. Sure Spawn has now run longer (more issues) but so has Batman. There are swaths of Spawn with no McFarlane writing, pencilling, inking, etc. It's a false hype pile of doodeedoodeedoo. But Todd is a character, and it's almost always amusing to hear him speak.

    -e.

     

    p.s. Larson is at least up over 250 issues now, and (shocker) pretty sure he worked on the whole thing.


    p.p.s. The whole McFarlane story arc of work for hire ... fight The Man ... make his own book/company ... become one of big 3 companies ... become The Man ... to bring in artists to Work for Hire  has always struck me as all kinds of ironic. Admirable, but ironic.

  9. 13 hours ago, vodou said:

    but how about Page 3 of The Constitution? All good too?

    Pffffft. Why stop there? How about the second tablet of the Ten Commandments?!?  To me that is seriously up in getting-silly territory to make a point.

    To me it seems the heart of the matter is one of property rights. Some folks take it to further extremes than others. If you had the complete ASM 121 prelims, and wanted to split it up to maximize profits, eh. Some folks will not bat an eyelash, and others will think you the scourge of the hobby. I think if you are a Dealer, you raise less of an eyebrow by and large than if you are a collector.

    If you chose to burn those prelims instead... well some folks would just think you were "eccentric", some would hate you. But you'd be within your rights to do so. No law against it. It'd be like buying a house with some kind of cultural history tied to it, but isn't on some historical register somewhere that protects it. Then, either modifying it greatly, or outright knocking it down to build your new vanity home. You are going to catch some ire from the neighbors.

    In the end, to me it just gets back to our actions in the hobby speak to who we are, and what we value far more than our words do. And as we've discussed in the past, reputation still means a lot, and word gets around. If someone bought a rare complete book that had a lot of competition for ownership, and then say decided to keep the cover and a page, and split up the rest... next time a complete book comes up for sale from the same dealer, depending on how that dealer feels they may chose not to sell to said individual again.

    In the end, it's gray, it's muddy, it's a big whatever works scenario. And there can be a nobility in trying to take the tact of looking at comic art as custodial, rather than a straight ownership. Same can be said for a lot of items tied to pop culture. And yet, not everything survives. Some things are lost, stolen, altered, damaged, lost to accident, kid drew on it, dog chewed it, etc.  For a few there might be an academic woody to be found in the idea of being the guy that preserved the one complete story of OA for Adolescent Radioactive Blackbelt Hamsters, but in the long run, other than as a passing curiosity, who will likely care?

    There are some stories that ideally should remain together if at all possible, but in the long run, as with anything of import in comics, you can't predict what will be important before it becomes so. And in the end if collecting art doesn't come down to enjoyment, it's really just another investment. And we have long discussed the idea of collecting art as investment vs the love of the work.

    So one side of the gradient is to treat all art as if it is going to be important to the anthropologists of the future, and the other is to treat anything you own however you damn well see fit. And for the vast majority of us, it's that gray in between. Simple answer, do your best and don't be a Donk. If you really love the stuff, treat it with a modicum of respect. Beyond that, your hobby will live and die on your reputation.

     

     

  10. Conqueror Worm / Box Full of evil is gonna be your transition sweet spot, in the arc of Mike's art evolution. Older pieces have darker blacks, but less of the great visionary simplicity of what Mike has distilled his art down into. By that point you have just a little bit of the spotchy blacks. Much more subtle and eye appealing as far as that potential for distraction goes. After those books, the splotchy blacks become more prominent as his ink gets thinner.  FWIW.

     

    And yeah, I always thought the point of the art editions was to hold a repro of holding the art in your hand. Not just a big copy of the comic with everything cleaned up, no colors, and the borders showing. I want to see the tanning paper. The whiteout. The creases and even the snot blast, cause you know artists sneeze.  :)

  11. Lots and lots of lines? Check. Wolverine claws popped? Check. Legs ending into a pile of rubble/fog/water? Check. All female characters with bad posture to emphasize butt and waist? Check. Pouches?
    Pouches.......................................    am I the only one noticing a distinct lack of pouches? Where do they keep their keys to the mansion and the blackbird? The team must have left them at home.

    OR someone stole all the pouches in the mansion. Is this the issue about getting the pouches back?

    Claws-out Wolverine and Emma's lack of feet and scoliosis are only good for so much. Without pouches though...  probably kept this one from breaking $50k.

  12. Without knowing anything, it almost looks to me like they printed that from the sort of scan they'd send to Dave Stewart after the black levels had been fixed, and the paper knocked back to a clean white. All Mignola's blacks tend to be "thin" and splotchy. have been for ages. Shame the repro didn't capture that. Were all the pages this black adjusted, or only certain ones?

  13. 39 minutes ago, sfilosa said:

     

    I will say stressing about shipping is just a pain. I don't think I have missed one bit of sleep because I thought I could have sold something for more, but I definitely lose thinking about how I'm going to ship, pack, when to go to the mailing place, etc. And my shipping costs are always a lot more than I expect.

     

    Just wanted to say, you and me both.