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Comic book collecting is a hobby that treats comic books and related items as collectibles or artwork to be sought after and preserved.
Though considerably more recent than the collecting of postage stamps philately or books bibliophilia , it has a major following around the world today and is partially responsible for the increased interest in comics after the temporary slump experienced during the s. Comics are collected for several possible reasons, including appreciation, nostalgia, financial profit, and completion of the collection.
The comic book came to light in the pop culture arena in the s due to the popularity of superhero characters Superman , Batman , and Captain Marvel. As comic books regained their popularity in the s during the boom of the Silver Age , fans organized comic book conventions , where they could meet to discuss their favorite comics with each other and eventually with the creators themselves. As of [update] , numerous conventions and festivals are held around the world, with Comic-Con International , held annually in San Diego, being the largest and best-known convention in the United States.
While some people collect comic books for personal interest in the medium or characters, others prefer to collect for profit. To assist both types of comic book collector, comic book price guides are available and provide estimates of comic book values as well as information on comic book creators and characters.
The price guides assign values for comic books based on demand, availability, and the copy's condition. The longest running price guide is the annual Overstreet Price Guide , first published in Another current monthly price guide is Comics Buyer's Guide.
The growth of the Internet in the late s saw development of online databases to track creator, character appearances, and storylines, as well as websites combining comic book price guides with personalized collection tracking to provide collection values in real-time.
The Grand Comics Database is a popular online resource for comic book creator and character information. Popular online price guide and collection tracking services include comicbookrealm.
The increased popularity of online auctioning services like eBay or Heritage Auctions for buying and selling comic books has greatly increased the visibility of actual comic book sale prices, leading to improved price guide accuracy, particularly for online price guides such as comicspriceguide. GPA only tracks sales of slabbed books, and therefore is not an accurate indicator of overall comic sales.
In response to collectors' interest in preserving their collections, products designed for the protection and storage of comic books became available, including special bags; boxes; and acid-free "backing boards", designed to keep the comic book flat. Before the late s, virtually no specialized comic stores existed and the notion of comics as collectible art was in its infancy. A few collector-based retail establishments existed, most notably Pop Hollinger 's retail and mail order shop for new and used comics in Concordia, Kansas , which was in full swing by Claude Held had followed suit in Buffalo, New York , by The origins of comic book collecting as an organized hobby has its roots in early science fiction fandom and comic book letters pages.
In the US a few specialist shops had opened their doors by the s, but were still a small market. In the UK, the only distribution channels available were ordinary news stands and mail order publications like Exchange and Mart or through zines run by the early panelologists themselves. Denver, Colorado-based retailer Chuck Rozanski played a large role in the growth of the comics speculation market in when he acquired the high-value "Mile High Collection" — 16, comic books dating from to — and slowly began releasing select books into the marketplace.
During the late s—early s major comic publishers like Marvel [5] and DC Comics started to recognize the new movements and started publishing material that was intended for sale in specialist shops only. When Marvel tested the new comics specialty market with the title Dazzler in , the comic sold over , copies, a very respectable figure and one that astounded the company.
Hereafter, comics publishers started tailoring ever-increasing percentages of marketing and production solely for the sale in specialist stores. While the bulk of the revenues still came from sales through regular channels, the ability to focus more specifically on specific target groups as well as distributing comics not on a sale-or-return basis, but in limited runs according to sales predictions from the retailers themselves, over-printing and overhead costs could be drastically reduced.
From the s to the present day, comics publishers have been targeting more and more of their titles to collector audiences with features such as limited editions, the use of high quality paper, or the inclusion of novelty items.
From roughly through , comic book speculation reached its highest peaks. Once aware of this niche market, the mainstream press focused on its potential for making money. During this time, mainstream comic book publishers began to pander specifically to the collectors' market. Techniques used included variant covers , polybags , and gimmick covers.
When a comic was polybagged, the collector had to choose between either reading the comic book or keeping it in pristine condition for potential financial gain, or buying two or more copies to do both. Gimmicks included glow-in-the-dark, hologram-enhanced, die-cut, embossing, foil stamped or foil-embossed covers.
However, many speculators would buy multiple copies of these issues, anticipating that demand would allow them to sell them for a substantial profit in the future. Low-budget independent publishers also proliferated during this period. The low price of producing comics, and the ease and efficiency of the direct market enabled fly-by-night publishers to flood the market with product, much of it of low quality.
This period also saw a corresponding expansion in price guide publications, most notably Wizard Magazine , which helped fuel the speculator boom with monthly columns such as the "Wizard Top 10" highlighting the "hottest" back-issues of the month , "Market Watch" which not only reported back-issue market trends, but also predicted future price trends , and "Comic Watch" highlighting key "undervalued" back-issues.
The speculators who made a profit or at least broke even on their comic book "investments" did so only by selling to other speculators. Veteran comic book fans pointed out an important fact about the collectors market that was largely overlooked by speculators: popular Golden Age comic books were valuable because they were genuinely rare. Since comic books were originally marketed to children and not viewed as collectable until much later, most Golden Age comics didn't survive to the present era.
And before the s, comic books were typically printed on cheap paper stock that aged very poorly. As a result, popular comic books published from the s through the s are extremely difficult to find and thus highly prized by collectors. By contrast, the speculator boom of the s saw large print runs of comics on high-grade paper that were carefully stored by multitudes of collectors, creating a glut of product in the collectors market.
The comic book speculator market reached a saturation point in the early s, and finally collapsed between through Two-thirds of all comic book specialty stores closed in this period, [6] and numerous publishers were driven out of business. Even industry giant Marvel Comics was forced to declare bankruptcy in , although they were able to continue publishing.
It is surmised that one of the main factors in Marvel's downfall was the decision to switch to self-distribution via their purchase of Heroes World Distribution. Until then, many publishers went through secondary distributors such as the current and only mass distributor, Diamond Comic Distributors , and Marvel felt it could preserve some of its cash flow if it made the move to becoming one of the few publishers to also distribute directly to the comic market.
This backfired terribly when the bottom fell out of the market, as they were stocked with multiple printings of variant and "collectible" issues that were no longer in high demand, and they could not cover the costs of their distribution service.
The bust can also be linked back to some of the series that caused the boom a few years earlier. DC's decision to publish two blockbuster stories depicting the loss of their two major superheroes " Knightfall " — the breaking of the Batman — and " The Death of Superman " , and their subsequent flooding of the press as to their supposed finality, is considered by some collectors to have started a slow decay within the non-regular buyer comic community which then led to drops in sales.
Many comic retailers believe that numerous comic speculators took the death and crippling of two major characters to signify the end of the Batman and Superman series. As many comic readers and retailers knew full well, very little in comics actually changes with any finality.
Many aspects of the status quo returned after the story arcs were over Superman died, but was resurrected, and Batman was crippled, but eventually recovered. Many comic speculators who were only in the market to see important comics mature, then sell them for a profit, did not quite understand how quick the turnaround would be on the story recant, and many rushed out to scoop up as many copies of whatever issues were to be deemed significant.
Comic shops received not only staggering sales during the week that Superman died, [6] but also had to try to meet the demand. This led to the saturation of the market and the devaluing of what was thought to be the end of an American icon. Some comic book retailers and theorists deem DC's practices in the press forum, and their relationship with the non-specialized consumer, to be grossly negligent of the status of the market, and that their marketing campaign, most likely not malicious in intent, spelled doom for the speculator market and comic sales in general.
Others place the blame for the comic market crash on Marvel whose product line had bloated to hundreds of separate titles by late , including the poorly received " Marvel UK " and " " lines , or creator-owned upstart Image Comics , who fed the speculator feeding frenzy more than any other comics publisher.
Other publishing houses had different problems. Their primary motivation was to make the properties more suitable for use in video game development. Eventually, Acclaim filed for bankruptcy following the collapse of its video game business. The miniseries Deathmate — a crossover between Image Comics and Valiant Comics — is often considered to have been the final nail in the speculation market's coffin; although heavily hyped and highly anticipated when initially solicited, the books from the Image Comics side shipped so many months late that reader interest disappeared by the time the series finally materialized, leaving some retailers holding hundreds of unsellable copies of the various Deathmate books.
Currently, most of the hype generated around the major companies' comics involves changes to the characters, well-known creators writing or illustrating a title, and media coverage surrounding an adaptation to another medium such as film or television. The one remaining bastion for comic speculation remains in online auction sites such as eBay ; but even there, comic books remain a buyer's market.
In the s, prices for genuinely rare near-mint comics rose steadily, doubling in some cases. Improved accountability has increased collector confidence, although some collectors have complained that the market has once again become more about speculation, instead of being focused on the art and stories.
The sale of a CGC-graded 8. It was quickly eclipsed by a CGC-graded 8. To preserve comics, which are a printed medium, it is prescribed that they be stored in cool, dark places, as sunlight can bleach the pages, and heat and moisture can also damage them. Sunlight can also react with the paper , causing it to "yellow", as well as having a bleaching effect on the inks used within the comic.
Some collectors advise against storing comics in cardboard boxes, or using backing boards, as these are both sources of acid which can react with the fibers of the paper of comics, eventually destroying a comic.
If these products are used to store comics, these collectors advise using products marked as acid free. PET film , polyethylene or polypropylene storage bags are popular, and allow a comic to be "bagged" in a contained environment, and have become the traditional way of storing comics. Some comic shops now sell comics already in bags, although the quality of the bag can vary.
These types of bags are not considered "archival safe" because various plastic compositions may contain elements or have other properties that could harm the comic in years to come. Mylars are the only bags available that are archival safe.
Corrugated plastic boxes, preferred by some collectors, offer greater protection against acid while also offering better protection against moisture damage and vermin damage. Original art, typically 11x17 bristol boards with the pencils and ink, can be protected against direct sunlight as well as acid deterioration by using an archival quality frame coupled with glass which has been treated to protect against ultraviolet rays.
In the column Comic Book Vitamins [20] on the Project Fanboy website, Steven Sykora discussed preserving collections by submitting comic books to the CGC , where comics are inspected for flaws, graded accordingly and placed in an inner well — a sealed sleeve of Barex, a highly gas-impermeable plastic polymer. This process is often referred to in slang as "slabbing" and there is debate as to whether this provides better protection for the books than an acid-free backing board and Mylar sleeve.
Storing a comic as a computer file scanning and saving the comic as a comic book file or. However, as with other digital means of storing media, this also allows for the possibility of copyright infringement via unauthorized digital distribution, such as peer-to-peer file sharing networks. A subscription crease describes a specific flaw in the condition of a comic book, particularly a crease through the entire book running from top to bottom.
It is a term commonly used by comic book collectors. When comic book publishers began mailing comics directly to monthly subscribers they would simply fold the comic in half and stuff it into a standard 10 business envelope. This method was expedient and cost effective — the comic book business survived on razor-thin margins — but resulted in a clearly visible line running from top to bottom of a comic. The "memory" factor inherent in paper assured that this crease would be visible forever.
Consequently, collectors , who prize condition, consider this a defect that lowers the desirability of a particular issue. This practice faded away in the early s when publishers found a marketing opportunity in mailing comics in larger envelopes, unfolded. Hence the appearance of in-issue ads touting that monthly comics were "Mailed flat! Collecting original art is the collecting of the artists' production pencils and inks used in the creation of comic books.
Unlike mass-produced comic books, there is only one piece of original art for each individual comic book page or cover. As of , it is the most expensive page of a comic book ever sold. Many private collections of comics exist, and they have also started to find their way onto the shelves of public libraries.
Museums and universities with notable collections of comics include:. Comic collectors are people who collect comics or comic books.
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