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Post by Icctrombone on Jul 24, 2024 10:40:13 GMT -5
Years ago, I had copies of Peter Porker Spider-ham and Marvel Tails and gave them away to a library along with 4 long boxes of comics. I think they are worth something now.
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Post by codystarbuck on Jul 24, 2024 11:19:28 GMT -5
Regret, not because of any value, but a few indie comics that I used to have, that have never been collected and no one has posted scans of them. One is a book, from Slave Labor, called Scarlet Thunder, from their brief Amaze Inc imprint. Dan Vado did the story, Rick Forgus the art. It was set during WW2, with a government project to create super-soldiers, with a pair of rival speedsters emerging as the result. There were 4 issues. It was a fun read and had some original ideas.
Another was The Dark, by Joseph Neftali and Mark Bright, from Continuum. It featured an immortal warrior (dressed like a superhero ninja), in the modern world. It had some of the better elements of Highlander and an intriguing storyline and George Perez did the cover of the 4th issue. I had the whole run, which was only 7 issues (in the second attempt at it, reprinting the 4 issues of the previous series, then 3 more). Nice little comic, ignored by the world, except the Perez cover.
I had the trade copy of Thomas E Sniegoski's Swords of Shar-Pei, from Caliber, which was a great little series, mixing anthropomorphic animals, ala Kirby's Kamandi, and samurai drama. I had the original comics and later bought the trade, but it disappeared when I last moved. I think I inadvertently mixed it in with books I gave away. I had intended to keep it. I do have scans of the follow-up, Guns of Shar-Pei.
Aside from that I wish I had room to have kept my collection of translated European graphic albums, like Vittorio Giardino's Max Fridman albums, Pepe Moreno's work, Andreas' Rork, my Schuiten Cities of the Fantastic series, Code XIII, The Survivor and my Igort album. I also had the dark Horse albums for Rocco Vargas and Juan Giminez' work, like Leo Roa. I do have digital of most of that; but the Giardino stuff is in French, Spanish or Italian. I can mostly follow the Spanish language editions, between what I can translate and the images; but, it would be nice to have English. The Igort one is the big one, as I have never found scans of that material. Not much from a story standpoint, but some really interesting art work, mixing in a lot of diverse influences, including Japanese art (traditional art, not manga). I also had a later album he did, of a crime story, where his art had greatly evolved. It was fine; but, I'm more interested in the volume that Catalan put out.
The one real regret is giving to a library my copy of the limited edition printing of The Monster Society of Evil. It was done privately, limited to something like a thousand copies, and came in a huge coffee table hardcover, with a slipcase. It was beautiful and I had a low number. I don't know what I was thinking, other than I needed to clear some space, when Barb moved in with me.
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Post by mikelmidnight on Jul 24, 2024 11:25:24 GMT -5
Giant Size X-Men #1 (it'd put my kid through college)
Harrier Comics from the 80s, Plaster Man of Paris and some other stuff
I was sad I gave away my copy of Superfolks, but I recently found it at a library sale, so reclaimed!
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Post by tonebone on Jul 24, 2024 12:18:38 GMT -5
My aunt worked at a thrift shop, and whenever she got in any comics related stuff they didn't usually sell, she would box it all up and bring it to me. It was usually MAD or comics paperbacks, but once she gave me the entire run of FOOM. They were such an oddity for me. They weren't REALLY comics, just a bunch of articles with some pictures. I eventually gave them away. MAN, do I regret that.
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Post by DubipR on Jul 24, 2024 13:07:19 GMT -5
I had to sell some Silver Age comics back in 2008 when I was out of work to make sure I had a roof over my head. Now those books are huge moneymakers. I had to do what I had to do.
-R
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Post by Rob Allen on Jul 24, 2024 13:10:49 GMT -5
I had a copy of a self-published comic called The Brute. I think it came from a cartoonist in New England. It really wasn't good at all, and at some point I decided it wasn't good enough to keep. Nowadays I love having weird stuff like this.
I took it to a con and sold it to someone for fifty cents, which is what I'd paid for it. The only good page in the book was a pinup-style picture of the hero's girlfriend, Anna Tomikul. Her name gives you an idea of the intellectual level of the comic.
Another regret is that I don't have copies of any of the four comics published by the company my father worked for. Logos International was a Christian publisher of the evangelical/charismatic variety. My parents went thru a born-again phase, which I did not join in. So even though I was one of the first people outside the company to see their first two comics, I didn't want to keep them. Besides not sharing the faith they promoted, I thought the art in Logos' comics was terrible. I've seen scans recently and they don't look as bad to me now. Not good, but Charlton-level competent.
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Post by Slam_Bradley on Jul 24, 2024 13:14:51 GMT -5
My only regret is spending money on bad comics instead of good comics.
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Post by MRPs_Missives on Jul 24, 2024 13:29:20 GMT -5
My biggest regret is one of timing, rather than regretting selling a book. I sold my copy of Iron Man #55 1st Thanos for a price I was satisfied with, but it was 3 weeks before the release of the first Avengers movie in 2012, when that book went form a $350 book in high grade, to a $3500 book in high grade.
My other regret is that I discovered Usagi Yojimbo in the late 80s and had most of the Critters appearance, all the early Fantagraphics issues and even one of the Albedos (not the first one), but in the early 90s when I was at university, I sold a few bulk boxes of comics to be able to afford food, and I had stopped reading Usagi at the time, and they were in that bulk box.
I've missed out on some stuff when it came out and had to track it down later, but everything else I have sold, including my entire SA Marvel collection, I've been content with the decision to do so.
-M
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Post by Ricky Jackson on Jul 24, 2024 15:20:42 GMT -5
My greatest regret/shame is trading a high grade copy of Fantastic Four #46 (first Black Bolt), that I believe was selling for only $12 at a local store (this was around 1989) and was probably a birthday gift, for a copy of *sigh* New Mutants #89. So not even the first Cable. This was around 1992 and I was young, dumb and for some reason obsessed with Rob Liefeld. Even Icctrombone wouldn't have made that trade
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Post by tarkintino on Jul 24, 2024 15:31:01 GMT -5
My only regret is sticking with certain superhero titles longer than I should have, because it was a low period for the title, and I hoped some new editor or writer would turn things around. Thankfully, my loyalty to certain titles was not so strong that I spent money on things I did not want, but I did waste minutes scanning through titles on the rack to see if anything changed.
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Post by codystarbuck on Jul 24, 2024 15:53:38 GMT -5
I mostly cared about the story & art and not the physical comic; so, as long as I could read it in some fashion, when I wanted, I was okay. I have 95-98% of what I used to own, digitally; but, its that 2-5% that hasn't been collected or scanned that I regret. With the albums, there is a bit of regret (same with physical books) about not being able to hold them in my hands or pull them off a shelf and look at them. Libraries were always magical to me and that was my dream, over the years; but, I come from practical people and practicality dictated I didn't have room to hang onto so much stuff. So, I can read most things, either on my external hard drive and computer, or online. It's just those little oddball things, which only seem to matter to me and one or two others, that nag at me.
Most of my collecting was done as cheaply as possible, when you could get a 1970s Steve Gerber Defenders, with the Guardians of the Galaxy, for 50 cents, in Good to Very Good condition. That's why the only X-Men issues I ever owned I had bought new, on the stands. I couldn't or wouldn't pay $10 for a single comic (or more). Even when I had that kind of money, I had trouble justifying it, unless it was fairly old and important. Even then, I never paid more than $20 for a comic produced after the 1940s. I had a few Golden Age books and the most I had paid was $35, for a Captain Marvel Adventures, until I parted with a hundred dollars for Exciting Comics #9, the first appearance of the Black Terror, and then felt like a rube for having done so, when I looked through the comic. It wasn't even one of the Jerry Robinson & Mort Meskin issues, which came later. It was passable art and a mediocre story and I swore never to do that. That's why I just can't understand the slabbing thing, especially buying slabbed comics, when you can't prove that what is inside is the real thing, without cutting it open. A certification from a company that I view as a con isn't much comfort to cynical old me.
I gave the bulk of my comics to a friend who volunteered at a boys' home and I have no regrets about that. It just felt too good.
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Post by Cei-U! on Jul 24, 2024 16:49:15 GMT -5
Over the years I've probably sold off, traded, or given away something like 7,000 comics but the only books I sincerely wish I'd kept are my copies of Fantastic Four #1 (autographed by Kirby), Amazing Fantasy #15, Iron Man #1, and Sub-Mariner ('68) #1.
Cei-U! I summon the lost treasures!
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Post by Icctrombone on Jul 24, 2024 21:40:14 GMT -5
In the early 90's I used to sell my collections in local comic shows. One time I saw another dealer that had Avengers #1 and he wanted 100 bucks. I didn't pull the trigger to my eternal regret.
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Post by berkley on Jul 25, 2024 23:34:18 GMT -5
I was thinking a few weeks ago of starting a thread with the title, "I snoozed and I losed", but I kept putting it off and now icctrombone has got there first. So once again I have snoozed and losed.
I have a bunch of them, Comics Regrets that is, as likely most of us do since we've been buying and reading comics for so many years. My first, and perhaps the most serious in a way, is the one Ive mentioned in passing many times before: getting out of comics three or four years in the early 70s - I can pin down exactly when I started reading and buying again (the spring or early summer of 1975) but stopping was a more gradual tapering off. So I missed a lot of great stuff, including some of what are now my favourite comics. Some were entire runs: e.g. Kirby's various DC series, and some were the beginnings and middle of things I picked up late in the run, e.g. MoKF, Killraven; and some were things I had started and enjoyed but missed almost all the middle, e.g. Man-Thing.
It's quite possible I appreciated these series more reading them as hard-to-find back issues and gradually piecing together a complete set - I might well have been too young to understand some of the things a writer like Gerber was doing in Man-Thing or Englehart in Dr. Strange. But I still regret missing that experience and having to play catch up.
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Post by Icctrombone on Jul 26, 2024 5:17:16 GMT -5
In the 90’s I was doing a show and I traded about 10 Star Wars figures still in the packaging for about 10 McFarlane adjectiveless Spider-man comics. It was a really bad deal on my part. They were the Star Wars figures that had the coins in it. My then wife never let me forget about it.
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