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RockMyAmadeus

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Posts posted by RockMyAmadeus

  1. Just recieved the images from a recent submission. Lately, I have been sending in my PGX books to CGC and so far it has been the same grades. :banana:

     

    Grendel #1 CGC 9.8 - Bought from Grails as a PGX 9.8

     

    981304-001.jpg

     

    Grendel #3 CGC 9.8 - Previously PGX 9.8

     

    981304-002.jpg

     

    Awesome!

     

    AWESOME!!!

  2. must get it slabbed.

     

    Here's a more extensive reason.

     

    I've been advised for years to get my copy slabbed.

     

    I don't want to. Why?

     

    Because when it's slabbed, I will have the OVERWHELMING urge to sell it.

     

    And I don't want to sell it.

     

    I found...for the first time in almost 20 years of collecting....an Albedo #2 in 2007 for 75 cents.

     

    Yes, 75 cents.

     

    (I was due.)

     

    I had it slabbed at WWLA last year, and it came back 9.0.

     

    I sold it almost immediately.

     

    It was the only copy I have ever owned.

     

    And now, I have to replace that copy for my collection.

     

    So, I don't wanna slab this copy, because I will face the overwhelming temptation to sell it, because it will be so EASY.

     

    At least with it unslabbed, it's much, much harder to part with (I'd never, ever, ever sell it if it wasn't slabbed.)

     

    :)

  3. BZ's collection is starting to remind me of a line from an uncle scrooge story, loosely: the only reason these things are rare is because BZ has them all!

     

    (the money pit by Rosa - btw, BZ, have you read the Rosa duck stories? I think you'd enjoy them)

     

    Rosa may have written the story you describe, but it was (as usual) Barks who first used that angle. In a story that I believe originally appeared in one of the first 25 or so issues of Uncle Scrooge, Scrooge decides to make a random 1916 quarter incredibly valuable by acquiring ALL the 1916 quarters that were made, and dumping them in the ocean... then he loses the single on that he'd set aside, and has to go down to an Atlantis-like world to retrieve another of the quarters...at the end, he takes the one salvaged quarter to a coin shop, and the dealer gasps and says "why, this coin is so rare and valuable, only one person in the world could afford to buy it - Scrooge McDuck!" laugh.gif

     

    That's fairly interesting...because 1916 Standing Liberty quarters are one of the classic rarities of 20th century US silver coinage...an example in even the worst condition is worth $3-$4K. An MS65 (comparable to a 9.8) could sell for $100K with a full head.

  4. Some of you asked me to see the slab once I got it back. Well, here it is.

     

    Avengers58.98.1.jpg

     

    It's so nice to see books like this. By the time I STARTED collecting, these books were long gone out of the marketplace. I didn't think a NM silver age book even EXISTED, much less what would end up as a 9.8.

     

    It's so nice to see them come back into the light.