• 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.

jimbo_7071

Member
  • Posts

    4,712
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by jimbo_7071

  1. The D presumably stands for the distributor, possibly the same distributor as the Edgar Church and Aurora collections. I take the numbers to be dates, 1/6 or possibly 11 6 with no slash and 7/19 (as opposed to copy 7 out of 19, etc.).
  2. I was actively collecting books from '84 through'90, and every dealer I bought from in that era downgraded books heavily if there was writing on the cover, with the exception of unobtrusive pencilled distributor markings. CGC marks books down very heavily for stains; what is writing on the cover but a stain in a special shape? As much as I appreciate the Okajima books, the coded camp books should not be graded the way they are. A book with writing on the cover is not a high-grade book. I suspect that the choice to ignore writing on the covers of books was made in order to add value to collections like Larson and Recil Macon, which would have been heavily penalized otherwise. It reminds me of the decision to allow books with a "very minor amount" of glue or color touch to get universal labels. I don't mind writing that much, but it should be factored into the grade regardless of when it occurred.
  3. It's an extremely common, overvalued issue. There are 875 Universal 9.8s and 255 Signature Series 9.8s in the census. There are probably thousands of raw 9.8s out there. That said, Stan's autograph may eventually have a fixed value, regardless of what it's on. I have no idea what that value will be twenty years from now when he's no longer with us. However, he has autographed many, many comics and continues to do so. so his autograph is by no means scarce.
  4. This one just came in the mail Another boardie posted his copy over in the Gold forum, and I liked the cover, so I bought one.
  5. Thanks! This book helped me learn to be more flexible about buying mid grade books. I enjoy it just as much as my higher-grade books, and it was much cheaper.
  6. They do have some water resistance; when the Greg Manning basement flooded, many books, including some Mile Highs, were ruined; most of the slabbed books came out unscathed.
  7. I wasn't the owner of the book when the damage occurred; John Verzyl was. I believe he sent it back to CGC in the holder. Matt Nelson handled the removal of the book with an eye towards minimizing the damage.
  8. I've never seen them hide sales data before. (That doesn't mean they haven't done it.) GPA is supposed to be unbiased; if they're participating in this, then they are no longer a reliable source of information.
  9. I'm not sure where yellow stops and orange begins, but I think this one belongs in the yellow column.
  10. I was skimming kind of quickly, but I didn't see these two posted yet.
  11. By the way, this book used to be a 9.2. It is now a 7.5 because, in the original holder, there was room for the pages to tear away from the cover. (Note the tearing at the upper staple.)
  12. Sorry for the slow reply. Of the old-label slabs that show less bowing, two of the books in them are 64-page books. The third is not, but for some reason CGC used one of the thicker slabs normally used for 64-page books (maybe because the book exhibits a slight amount of spine roll).
  13. All I know is that Cap 3 has been on my want list for a long time, and now I'm kicking myself for not buying one while they were still affordable in high grade.
  14. You're right. The song should have been Short Fat Fanny by Larry Williams and the Vipers.
  15. You Keep me Hangin' On - Diana Ross and the Supremes
  16. Killing me Softly with his Song - Roberta Flack