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thehumantorch

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Everything posted by thehumantorch

  1. Sorry, will have to disagree. The way you collect isn't the way I collect or other people collect. Early Fantastic Four and similar 60s Marvels are what I read as a kid and that's what I'm drawn to. I have an emotional attachment to that era and I'm willing to pay for those books. I'm not rich but I can pick up a few nice books a year and I'd prefer that over buying piles of newer books. Sure I know what these books are worth and yes, someday I'll have to sell them, but in reality I just like old comics. And I'm thrilled that prices have recently dropped on most SA books, time to buy.
  2. As bad as it is I enjoy collecting comics and will continue to collect and purchase what I want. Because I’m not focused on any one era or title or genre there always seems to be something I want at a local show. And I still continue to buy from the US
  3. There's a lot of information out there right now and not all of it is good. And there are a lot of guys pressing books who really don't know what they are doing. I assume you're talking about the book written by KaptainMyke? If you're rubbing off colour you'll need to keep practicing on beaters until you have more control.
  4. You haven't missed anything. When you collect something that's hard to find you're probably not gonna find it locally so auction houses, ebay, or the bigger dealers in the US are your only option. And you're gonna pay expensive shipping and customs and exchange, it really does take the fun out of it. For years I've been having Heritage Auctions hold my wins and then ship once I have a box full. Last shipment was a couple oddball GA lots and a slab, weighing about 15 lbs, and Heritage charged me $185 usd (insane) or $250 cnd plus fully declared for duty. I haven't looked at a Heritage auction since. Your best bet is to have your books shipped to a friend in the US who will examine each shipment as it comes in and then ship to you once he has a pile. But shipping is expensive and you'll never get around the exchange rate.
  5. We won in 1812 and might very well win again.
  6. Thanks Mike. Grades are in. I feel very confident about my grades which means an awful round...
  7. I'm glad you got your book back. And I'm absolutely not placing blame on you in any way but we all have to be very careful whom we trust with our books and our money. I think about all the guys who have recently set up shop pressing and/or submitting books and I wonder how many of them are a hairs width from disappearing with customer's books and money. And I say that knowing of a couple local stores that went under and customer's books and money disappeared. One was predictable but the other was around for a while and I really liked the guys who ran it.
  8. I'm enjoying this thread. Please continue.
  9. I'd also like to suggest that you post some of your books in the grading forum. https://boards.cgccomics.com/forum/42-hey-buddy-can-you-spare-a-grade/ One book per thread. Good pics or scans of the front and back covers plus any close ups of anything out of the ordinary and a few shots of the interior covers and staples. The boardies who post in that forum are very experienced with CGC's grading and are surprisingly accurate grading from pictures
  10. Welcome to the boards. Based on your one picture I'd guess your Spectre #10 is at best a 5.0. A 6.0 sold last year for $30. My last submission of 25 books cost me $79 Canadian per book. Shipping costs to Canada are higher than to the USA and the exchange rate also increases my costs. I typically don't send in a book unless I believe it'll be worth $200 or more after grading. If you're in the USA it'll cost you less. $37 to grade a book of that value and era plus a invoice fee plus shipping both ways - shipping has become very expensive. Pressing is an additional cost if warranted. I'd suggest that on a financial basis that book just isn't worth getting graded. If it has sentimental value perhaps it is worth submitting for you.
  11. Congrats on the sale. That's a lovely book and a book I still remember reading and loving as a teenager. You've marked it as sold which is wonderful. Some sellers will post the name of the seller but most don't as some buyers would prefer to remain anonymous.
  12. Sigh, so a woman he tried to help stole from him and the books he had listed on ebay were listed mistakenly? I'd like to believe Mike but considering all that's happened that's difficult. Mike, could you please return everyone's books.
  13. And I know a guy who would weight each pack of cards to pull out the foils. There's some sneaky guys out there. There was a local dealer who had a Hulk 181 with the wrong MVS. artboy99 pointed out to him that it had the wrong MVS, ie someone had married in the pages from Hulk 179 so it appeared complete. He put it aside but continued to try to sell it without disclosing that it was tampered with and I've never purchased from him since. There's no way to detect a married in MVS unless you open the book.
  14. I haven't watched the video but can't imagine how they could determine the MVS was inside without inspection. Or determine if the MVS was the correct stamp - a local dealer was selling a Hulk 181 that had the wrong MVS, married in from a Hulk 179. When told he had the wrong MVS he tossed it in a box but continued to try to sell it without disclosing the married page.