What bad things have you let happen to your comics/tpbs?
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- riftt
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What bad things have you let happen to your comics/tpbs?
So I moved into a new living space recently that included a little built-into the wall bookcase in the dining area. I decided it would be the perfect place to put some of my graphic novels and regular books. A few weeks later I pull out one of the books and notice something. The pages are slightly wavy. Not dropped in the toilet waves on the actual pages of the books but the entire book's pages are now in sitting in kind of a wavy shape. I check a few more and yup...same thing.
I then notice that the bookcase itself is much colder and damper than the rest of the apartment. I ascertain that because it is recessed into the wall and it is an old building made of concrete that the moisture has been affecting the books and making them wavy.
this *SQUEE* me off to no end.
So I completely redesigned my place, switching out my dvds so I could put the books on the regular bookshelf. I figured that the dvds were in plastic so the moisture would not affect them and I put my criterions in the recessed bookshelf.
big mistake.
The next day, half of the criterions had wavy paper iin their plastic sleeves. so much for OOP value.
Anyone else have experience accidentally destroying their comics/trades?
I then notice that the bookcase itself is much colder and damper than the rest of the apartment. I ascertain that because it is recessed into the wall and it is an old building made of concrete that the moisture has been affecting the books and making them wavy.
this *SQUEE* me off to no end.
So I completely redesigned my place, switching out my dvds so I could put the books on the regular bookshelf. I figured that the dvds were in plastic so the moisture would not affect them and I put my criterions in the recessed bookshelf.
big mistake.
The next day, half of the criterions had wavy paper iin their plastic sleeves. so much for OOP value.
Anyone else have experience accidentally destroying their comics/trades?
- Peter Parker
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Well, I once had my books stored in a climate controlled storage room under the stairs in one of my parents homes. Eventually, there was a leak
that lightly saturated a few boxes. My prized Amazing Spider-Man books, specifically# 5-8 were ruined by water spoting
I still have those books as a reminder of the chaos mathematics of life, but did upgrade them after they were wet and damaged.
Other than that scarey tale, the only other "bad" thing to happen to my Comic books was...my wife
Hey, after all, they're only Comic books....right?
...I mean, that's what SHE's always telling me?...yeah, right. 



Other than that scarey tale, the only other "bad" thing to happen to my Comic books was...my wife



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- tbrezz
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I keep them well protected but recently there was an incident with a comic and cat pan needless to say the cover has a little something extra to offer
By the way does anyone need a Turok the Hunted #2 it's the C.S.S.S. version, 1 of a kind $50 any takers



By the way does anyone need a Turok the Hunted #2 it's the C.S.S.S. version, 1 of a kind $50 any takers


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Brandon
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So far I've been lucky...
. I remember reading somewhere that approximately 5% of any collectible gets destroyed every year through natural disaster, fire, human error, etc. That's one of the main reasons this stuff appreciates over time. Slowly but surely the supply gets eaten by the ravages of time.

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In my long history of collecting, I can't recall anything ever getting seriously damaged, except I had a Marvel comics 'sparkle' set, (where you put sparkly stuff on a picture), it was under my bed, & the cat shat upon it. So badly I threw it away. It's a wondr I still remember it, but I have an outstanding memory when it comes to trivial things.
ANYWAY, don't feel bad I remember reading an article about Stan (The Man) Lee, where he said that he had copies of everything he'd ever done (all the way back to Timely) destroyed by water damage in his basement. This article was in Rolling Stone back in 1971, & had a good piece on Strenko as well. The Hulk is on the cover.
This also reminds me of a bookstore in Dayton---Bonnetts. I went there one time & they were bringing up boxes that had got wet from a burst water pipe in the basement. I remember seeing alot of early issues of Famous Monsters that were ruined. These issues are valued at $100 & up each. It made me want to cry, & I didn't even own them.
My heart goes out to you guys!
---Steve
ANYWAY, don't feel bad I remember reading an article about Stan (The Man) Lee, where he said that he had copies of everything he'd ever done (all the way back to Timely) destroyed by water damage in his basement. This article was in Rolling Stone back in 1971, & had a good piece on Strenko as well. The Hulk is on the cover.
This also reminds me of a bookstore in Dayton---Bonnetts. I went there one time & they were bringing up boxes that had got wet from a burst water pipe in the basement. I remember seeing alot of early issues of Famous Monsters that were ruined. These issues are valued at $100 & up each. It made me want to cry, & I didn't even own them.
My heart goes out to you guys!

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- whetteon
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Tape pull on an Captain America #100 in 7.0 or higher condition. It was in considerably less condition when it came off. A moment of silence please.
<*bag pipes playing*>
<*bag pipes playing*>

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I had a tape pull incident once, but it wasn't my fault. It was on Marvel Feature #3 (Defenders vs The Titan, who was originally called the Hulk in Journey Into Mystery #62 & #66, pre-Bruce Banner Hulk).whetteon wrote:Tape pull on an Captain America #100 in 7.0 or higher condition. It was in considerably less condition when it came off. A moment of silence please.
<*bag pipes playing*>
Anyway, I went to a drugstore that sold comics. They had this issue (& a couple of others). It was new, & I needed it. It was their only copy. I didn't have my money on me at the time, so I asked the clerk if she would hold onto these 3 or 4 comics for me until I could come back in a half hour to get them. She said "Sure". Well, I came back to get them and she pulled them out from under the counter, & there was a "Reserved" note TAPED to the cover of Marvel Feature #3!! She pulled it off, & 'tape pulled' a quarter sized piece from below the logo. I was kinda *SQUEE*, but didn't want to come across like an anal kid to her. I bought the comics & left. And wound up getting a different copy elsewhere, later that month.
Back in those days, I didn't worry about tape pull from a comic bag, because I didn't keep any of them in bags. Bags were fairly new, & no one in town sold any. Plus I was on a small allowance which barely allowed me to buy all the Marvels I was collecting, let alone bag & board all of them!

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Every now and then at a show I see a really nice Silver Age comic that has been punched through for a 3-ring binder (surely so some kid could take it to school stuck in a notebook).
I saw a FF No. 6 like that once at a con in Miami ... $25 bucks, with three damn little holes in it.
I've never done that, but I did tear the cover off a few comics once when I was a kid, and stuck the covers inside a photo album. Artsy!
I saw a FF No. 6 like that once at a con in Miami ... $25 bucks, with three damn little holes in it.
I've never done that, but I did tear the cover off a few comics once when I was a kid, and stuck the covers inside a photo album. Artsy!
- hillmanthe2nd
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Back in the day I went to a LCS that had quite a nice selection of Silver Age Marvel in the back issue bins. Well, on this particular day some kid between 10 - 12 years old starts going through the back issues. Of course, being 10, 11, 12 years old and not quite tall enough look at the issues in the back of the bins, he starts pulling them out about halfway and BENDING them at a 90 degree angle so he can see the next one
The little comic crusher got through a run of silver age Tales To Astonish and Tales of Suspense before the owner of the shop stopped the madness.

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UGH...this makes me break out in a cold sweat panic. I cringe...HARD...when I see someone breaking spines like that. Ugh!hillmanthe2nd wrote:Back in the day I went to a LCS that had quite a nice selection of Silver Age Marvel in the back issue bins. Well, on this particular day some kid between 10 - 12 years old starts going through the back issues. Of course, being 10, 11, 12 years old and not quite tall enough look at the issues in the back of the bins, he starts pulling them out about halfway and BENDING them at a 90 degree angle so he can see the next oneThe little comic crusher got through a run of silver age Tales To Astonish and Tales of Suspense before the owner of the shop stopped the madness.
As for the hole punched stuff...I LOVE it! So long as there aren't words n' stuff missing (and there generally aren't) I'll buy stuff like that all day long at Poor prices! Especially if the books are otherwise decent.
I LOVE solid, 'otherwise F or VF' books like that! My other favorites are single large tears on the covers, large pieces missing out of the BACK cover, torn interior pages, and the like. Stuff that you KNOW is solid, but has that one big glaring flaw...
You know, the QUALIFIED GLOD stuff.

And you know what? It's HARD to find that stuff!

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ZephyrWasHOT!! wrote: UGH...this makes me break out in a cold sweat panic. I cringe...HARD...when I see someone breaking spines like that. Ugh!
I know what you mean, I DREAD the INEVITABLE day when My son is older and I come home to valiant carnage in my "man room"



When I was five, I dragged my dad into "Mike's Comic Hut"... If only I'd known..
- Peter Parker
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Ah, Queens...I grew up in Richmond Hill off Liberty Ave. & 124th St. There weren't any Comic Hut's at the time, but I bought many a comic at the numerous newstands along Liberty Ave. I moved from there in 1971.---SteveValiant OCD wrote:Yes sir, Don't tell me it's still there!Peter Parker wrote:That wouldn't happen to be...THE "Mikes Comic Hut" on Northern blvd in Flushing Queens, NY?..is it
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Wait, we have Queens here, too!Vault-Keeper wrote:Ah, Queens...I grew up in Richmond Hill off Liberty Ave. & 124th St. There weren't any Comic Hut's at the time, but I bought many a comic at the numerous newstands along Liberty Ave. I moved from there in 1971.---SteveValiant OCD wrote:Yes sir, Don't tell me it's still there!Peter Parker wrote:That wouldn't happen to be...THE "Mikes Comic Hut" on Northern blvd in Flushing Queens, NY?..is it
Oh...not THOSE kinds of Queens...?
Ok. Nevermind.
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Mike's used to be a 20' by 20' hole in the wall That was literally beneath the marquee of an old RKO theater back in the mid 70's. Later he moved to a BIG place a little west of the original location. I'd be shocked if any LCS could stay in business THAT long! If it's still there go in and tell them Sean Says thanks!!Vault-Keeper wrote:Ah, Queens...I grew up in Richmond Hill off Liberty Ave. & 124th St. There weren't any Comic Hut's at the time, but I bought many a comic at the numerous newstands along Liberty Ave. I moved from there in 1971.---SteveValiant OCD wrote:Yes sir, Don't tell me it's still there!Peter Parker wrote:That wouldn't happen to be...THE "Mikes Comic Hut" on Northern blvd in Flushing Queens, NY?..is it

When I was five, I dragged my dad into "Mike's Comic Hut"... If only I'd known..