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PovertyRow

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Everything posted by PovertyRow

  1. I did a quick peruse and found it on three different venues in a few minutes. My take it is a variation of "ink transfer stain" aka "Oil transfer stain" where the oil from the printers ink migrates, usually to the inside front cover. This seems to have gone in reverse from the inside front cover to the outside. Looking at the inside that is a heavy application of solid yellow with what appears to be some cyan, magenta and black in very small amounts. Guesstimate solid (100%) yellow, 30% magenta, 10% cyan and 5% black (its been 40 years since I was in 4-color pre-press so am a bit rusty.)
  2. My books from Bob were wonderfully packed (will save it for my own comic shipping) and arrived quite quickly and safely. Just the perfect size for my apartment mailbox, too! VERY easy to communicate with as well! Thanks Bob!
  3. My god that is a CLASSIC demonstration of the fugitive inks so common in Fiction House books!
  4. OMG That IS Elvis!!! As Bruce Campbell said in Army Of Darkness "Hail to the King, baby!"
  5. Some blurbs all right! "I wanted fun and popularity so I joined a teen-age sex club!" I need a copy!!!
  6. First Love #49 - Feb 1955 - the Last of the pre-codes for this title, which continued post-code through #90 in 1963. Very Van Helsing-esque use of the mirror. Guess the guy is "Bob".
  7. First Love #27 - 1953 Yet another trio!
  8. First Romance #20 - 1953 The couple being discovered is a popular theme. May make a fun "genre".
  9. Picked up a few Harveys. Really enjoying this new direction for me. First Romance #10 - 1951. Reminds me of the scene in Attack Of The Giant Leeches just before Bruno Vesota comes upon his his wife (Yvette Vickers) and his best friend (Michael Emmet).
  10. Wow! Thanks CGC Mike! Greatly appreciated! Here is the ST 169 PGM I was referring to. Wish the pic was still there buy Photobucket zapped them all without warning years ago!
  11. Just got back three books earlier today. All were pressed by the premier presser and sent by them to CGC so minimal back and forth. Any light creasing or finger bends would have been taken out. A repeat of my Modern fiasco but these are all pre-1975 books so I was hoping for more care in handling. Grader notes as follows (I bolded the relevant text): Marvel Spotlight #12 came back 8.5 Grader Notes: light creasing to cover light finger bends on cover light spine stress lines to cover Marvel Tales #1 (1964) came back 7.5 Grader Notes: light creasing to cover light finger bends on cover light spine stress lines to cover Strange Tales #169 Came back 7.5 light creasing to cover light spine stress lines to cover Regarding the ST 169 I had posted it in Can You Spare A Grade several years ago and the general consensus was certainly higher than 7.5. I put it in a Mylite 2 with Fullback and never touched it until I sub's it this time around. Still trying to find my PGM post but this new software search is useless and even Google Advanced Search can't find it.
  12. Please send me a nice DOP Aceto Balsamico Tradizionale Balsamic!
  13. For many C&P is the norm before submitting to a grading service. I tend to agree with you when you said "a perfectly clean comic with no bends shouldn't need it in order to get the highest grade."
  14. Hi nDemik! Welcome. Just a question and a question/comment. My question..when you said you bought out all that dealer's wall books ("all graded stuff he had") were they CGC type graded books or just books with a grade notated on a mylar? My question/comment: from an old collector to a new buyer. First the (rhetorical) question: when you said "my knowledge of comics started and ended with (Old comics are worth a ton!)" who told you age equates to value? Do get that idea out of your head. Age itself does not make a comic valuable. Condition combined with importance, wether it be a first appearance of an important character such as Action 1, Detective 27, Tales to Astonish 27, Strange Tales 110, Fantastic Four #1 etc., an origin story, a classic cover, a first such as Eerie #1 1947 or Adventures Into the Unknown #1, specific artists or writers...these factors make a comic valuable because the demand is there. Bottom line, demand dictates value, which accounts for the high prices being fetched by, for example, Hulk #181 with 15,658 CGC graded copies alone but an insane demand. Anyway, I do hope you enjoy acquiring more comics and hope you can put a bit of your available $$$ into picking up some reader copies or reprints to give you a bit more insight into the characters, art, stories, genres, artists etc. Best of luck to you!
  15. Missed seeing you all as well. On my previous shipment from CGC I signed into Fedex and it said this package was not eligible for such changes. Tried going back into Fedex but my password was not working. Requested a verification code be emailed to me so I could change my password. Received none. Next requested a text be sent to me. Again nada. Now I know they have my email as I requested my username via my email an d I got it. I also have emails from Fedex and also Texts from Fedex so I know they have my phone number as well. To paraphrase Stan Lee's cameo in the first AntMan movie: "Crazy super botched!" (For the benefit of those who may have not seen AntMan)
  16. I hear that. Being in SF regular Priority Mail has been excellent. Fedex not nearly so. Have yet to experience USPS Registered. Sadly since I was planning to stay home for that Fedex shipment I made a couple of online orders for Saturday delivery and they are out on the road as I type. So no show for me. To compensate even further after ordering from Robot Man's great cheap GA thread I ordered a few cool books from MCS today to help while away the time. I'll post them when I receive them.
  17. I must have some weird karma going with submitting to CGC. So my Fedex was supposed to be Saturday, as I said, so am staying home today. I made a few online orders for Saturday delivery since I was going to be home anyway. Now I find my CGC delivery has been rescheduled for Monday. Similar thing happened with my last Fedex CGC delivery, which is why I avoid them whenever possible.
  18. Remember too that water is, itself, a solvent. Just a drinkable one for us! But water can dissolve dirt on a book and, when that area dries, can leave a cleaner area with a thin accumulation of the dissolved dirt/matter forming a darker outline (the "tideline) around the area. Very common to see in books hit by water but in a new book...weird.
  19. Yeah, I got 7 Moderns a few weeks back with bends and dents. They were pressed by a premier presser and then submitted by them. One of the greatest offenses was a Spotlight #32 that the entire bottom was filled with bends due to how the book was encapsulated. Releasing it from the slab removed the bends and revealed a nice smooth bottom edge and that the ugliness was indeed caused by CGC. I am expecting three pre-1975 books today and pray they are being looked at by a more experienced group of individuals.
  20. Thanks. Not seen these but classically good Harvey GA look. A bit of research shows nicely affordable, too. Definitely will be picking a few up.
  21. Sadly I will not be attending. Just got a surprise email from Fedex that a package from Sarasota is arriving Saturday and required signature verification. These are for my pre-1975 books that went out the same time as that modern submission. I will have to satisfy myself with that and with the few GA books I picked up from Robot's cool sale!