• 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.

shadroch

Member
  • Posts

    53,069
  • Joined

Everything posted by shadroch

  1. Everyone collects differently. No one way is 100% correct, and very few are 100% wrong. Enjoy, I just didn't understand the purpose of the box of thirty. Never heard of the Box of Twenty concept. Best of luck whatever you choose.
  2. What is the purpose of the box? Is it to be put away and never opened until its time to finance your great grandchildrens college or is just for fun?
  3. It bugs me when people lump Star Wars and Star Trek together. One was an overnight success that is wildly popular with the public. The other is a failed tv show, that evolved into a mediocre movie franchise. One has produced multiple hit comics, Star Trek comics have never been a hit.
  4. Fantastic. Much as I'd love one, I would never ever be able to do that. Great workshop, by the way.
  5. After you have done some more research, take some of the better books and post pictures of them in the grading forum. Do not assume because they have been in plastic they are near mint. did they have backing boards? Depending on the type of bag they are in, the bags may actually have cause damage to the books. Bags sold in comic shops in the early 80s were often the type meant only for short term storage and eventually leaked chemicals into the books. It's hard for a beginner to grade accurately. A book you describe as Near Mint( 9.4) might sell for $25 in Very Fine (8.5) or $300 in 9.6 Don't go by any grades your father wrote on the books as grading standards are much tighter than they were thirty years ago. I had a shop when many of those books came out. As an example, I had 5 Spider-Man 252s that I had graded as NM. When I submitted the best three, one came back 9.4, one 9.2 and one 8.5. I'd suggest you call several dealers, or put the full list here. Trying to sell individual books is a pain and very time consuming. Selling them as a collection will net you less money than individual sales but save you a lot of time and trouble. Most books from the era are pretty common and don't sell for much. A great source is to look at the sold listings on ebay, and to go to mycomicshop.com and check out both their books for sale section to see what they are selling a book for and their buying section to see if they are buying the book and what they pay. They, and some other dealers offer a trouble free consignment service where you send them the books, they decide which books are worth getting graded, or even pressed , grade the others and work with you to set prices on the books. They then offer them on the sites, list them on ebay, do all the shipping and take care of all the fees. All for a very modest percentage of the final sale price. I use MCS all the time and find them great to deal with. However, they may not take many of your books as they are pretty common.
  6. Buy more books. The more books you buy, the more shipping material you have to repurpose. Surely your spouse can't gripe about you buying more shipping supplies.
  7. I've never seen a loyalty club like this, and while I had planned to use it in my own store if and when I ever got around to opening what would have been my fourth store, allow me to share it here.. People who join your loyalty club get no discounts on new books. Period. None. They pay full price. This is VERY important to your cash flow. To succeed, you need steady cash flow and you need to maximize it however possible. Discounting new books is suicidal until you have your ordering down to a science. What the people get instead is a credit towards a select group of back issues and trade paperbacks. Spend $40 on 15 new books, get 15 back issues free, or $40 credit towards older trades. You can make it half credit, or full . your choice. For this to work, you have to have a good supply of fresh back issues, but as you can replace them at a quarter a pop and hopefully have thousands to begin with, it works well in that you are getting full price for the new books and helping your customers expand their reading and hopefully they find stuff they like and come back and buy more back issues or trades from that run.
  8. Sounds like the book has a hidden defect. Many dealers seem to only grade covers.
  9. I'd go with Genesis, rather than Genesis Comics. Personal preference.
  10. I read somewhere that Marvel published more Kirby books per month after he left ( with no compensation to him) than they ever did while he was with them. You'd think after going bankrupt and destroying the market once, they might have learned their lesson, but that's not to be.
  11. I'd like to sell sales figures to show Watchmen has sold even a million copies, let alone millions. Unless you want to argue each monthly copy should count . In which case, Youngblood has also sold millions of copies. While a critical success, it was by no means a sales sensation when it came out. In my shop, I'd say less than half the people that bought the first issue stuck around for the twelfth one. Even TPB sales weren't that great for the first year or two. While it is a perennial best seller, it doesn't sell millions of copies.
  12. Image beat Marvel in sales in the first year they existed. Marvel was on its way to being the third ranked company until Pearlman blew up the market.
  13. They created a very successful model based on the then current market. Then Pearlman came along and destroyed the industry. Pearlman self distributed and flooded the market. Marvel put out hundreds of new issues a month and basically said either you order all our titles or you order none of them. Between the increased cost of shipping and having to buy so many extra Marvel titles, many shops had to cut down on their other stuff. Then as Distributor after Distributor went belly up after losing the ability to distribute Marvels, they went out of business owing companies like Valiant and Image hundreds of thousands. Image was creator owned and managed to survive. Valiant was run by investors who didn't know anything except that they weren't getting the returns they were promised and they bailed.
  14. Before comic shops, other genres flourished. If you look at a DC comic from 1974, you'll see superhero comics were a minority of their offerings. They had successful War and Horror lines, and perhaps a not so successful Sci-Fi, Strange line. Detective Comics went bimonthly for a while and the JLA was published 8 times a year. For whatever reason, the Direct Market never catered to anything other than Super Heroes ,with very few exceptions.
  15. I would not say the industry was healthy in 1960. Far from it. Marvel couldn't even find a distributor and had to piggy back off of DC's distribution center. It took years for Marvel to surpass DC in sales. I'd argue that Image, and even Valiant was just as much a game changer when they arrived than Marvel was in 1960/61. Who knows what might have happened if Marvel( and when I say Marvel I mean Ron Pearlman) hadn't changed the rules mid game. The industry had a half dozen distributors and thousands of shops. When Marvels experiment with self distribution ended in bankruptcy, the market got stuck with one distributor and two thirds of the shops gone, taking many smaller companies with it. Joe Lisner showed that one can self publish and make a ton of money. Dave Sim and the Pini's preceded him, but they never reached the heights he did with the early Dawns. With some many people self publishing, the chances of an entire universe springing up are scarce. Kurt Busieks Astro City is an exception but its on a minute scale.
  16. So CGC graded a book missing half the story as a 9.2. I can only imagine the uproar if one of the other grading companies did this.
  17. Are you looking at a four, five or six figure investment?
  18. What are 10% of your future sales? Is the person buying ten percent of your sales or 10% of your future inventory? Suppose the investor is unhappy. Can he sell his ten percent too some one else?
  19. Its not worth having it graded. If you get lucky, it might go for $10 on ebay. Almost definitely no more than that. I've bought some 80s and 90s double covers for less than you paid. My biggest concern is why you paid $3 for a beatup copper age book.
  20. In 1966, I was living in Japan and my best friends father was a black GI who had married a German girl. He was coming up on twenty years and I overheard him talking about life after retirement. I heard him say something to the effect of" You know I can never go home to Virginia again" and not understanding why. When I asked my parents, they kind of shrugged and told me I'd understand when I was a bit older. Fast forward to 1968 and I'm living in Queens, when a new kid enters the school. They had moved up here from Alabama and he said he had been the first black kid to enroll in a school several years ago. For that they burned down the house he was living in. That summer, we went swimming and I saw the burn scars on his legs. He never said he was in the house when it was firebombed or that his grandmother died there. If you think everything is better now, consider we had a place of worship bombed this week and not a word out of our leaders.