Showing posts with label collecting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label collecting. Show all posts

10 August 2013

collecting addict

a vid about a father who spent his life savings on beanie babies, thinking at first that it was a way to pay for college for his kids...i gotta make sure i don't go too crazy with the things i collect

27 October 2012

collecting geeky stuff

i may have a disposition for collecting things...i collect mainly books and firefly stuff, but i just started collecting hot wheels and small model ships...the strange part is that i also have a dislike for accumulating too much stuff...having a lot of things weighs me down, and the burden i feel is proportional to the cost and physical size of the item...it's why i don't like furniture and have put off buying a bed, sofa, and a real dining table...they're large and expensive - double whammy (but i did find a dining table i liked but world market wasn't willing to work a cheaper deal for a floor model...yes, i even try to haggle at retail stores)...i feel like i have to get rid of stuff after a certain point, and i think i will with some of my books and guns...i'll start reading books that i don't want to keep and sell them off as i finish them (some books i got by buying bulk lots on ebay, and that is why i have a lot that i don't really care to keep)....

i can't really explain why i collect other than i enjoy it, but it is in constant conflict with the side of me that doesn't want a lot of material things...i also see the futility in collecting things, since you can't really do much with the collection other than display it (maybe it's my way of decorating)...my tastes will probably change as time passes as well, and i might want to get rid of some of my collections later...for now, as long as i don't spend beyond my means and doesn't take up too much space, then it's ok...i already have buyer's remorse and can feel the cars "weighing" me down, because i bought too many...i can apply to get on "collection intervention" if it gets out of control...

for those who know me, it's pretty obvious why i collect firefly stuff, but i prefer things related to the ship and the characters (like the little damn heroes series from qmx)...the serenity ships that i have are what led to collecting model spaceships, and i thought it would be nice to have figures of ships that i liked...i'm interested in star trek ships like the various versions of the enterprise, voyager, and the defiant...i also have a few star wars ships like vader's advanced tie fighter, millennium falcon, and x-wing...i also have a version of mass effect's normandy...futurama's planet express is another that i am looking for, but that one is hard to find...i found one on ebay, but it's too bit expensive for what should be at most a 20 dollar toy...

i posted this in a previous post, but below is a link to blog with some good pics of small ships...
http://smallspaceships.blogspot.com/

my other new collecting hobby came about after a trip to the collectibles show called frank and sons...it was a few weeks after comic con, and i wanted to see if they had any merchandise from the convention...i walked by a vendor that had hot wheels and saw kitt, ecto-1, back to the future delorean, and the a-team van (my favorite of the four)...it wasn't too long after i read ready player one, so 80s references were fresh in my mind and couldn't pass up getting these cars...

blurry pic of kitt, ecto-1, a-team van, back to the future dmc-12, curiosity mars rover, original 60s tv batmobile, dark knight batmobiles, and little damn heroes in the back
in stores, they would only be a dollar each, but employees and scalpers get them all as soon as they're in stock and resell them at a higher price...they were still cheap when i got them though...however, i've seen kitt sell for $12 and ecto-1 for $15 now, and some vendors are planning to sell for up to $25 during xmas...buying these led to looking at regular hot wheels of cars that i liked, and i picked up a few ferraris and porsches...this led to buying more cars that i liked, and now i have too many...hard core collectors have thousands, but there is no way i could ever collect that many...the good thing is that outside of the 80s tv/movie cars, the cars that i like are not very collectible, so most are reasonably priced at around $1-3 bucks each but they still add up quickly...hot wheels makes limited edition treasure hunts and super treasure hunts, and these are what most collectors look for...i just look for die-cast versions of real cars that i like...mostly hot wheels, but matchbox makes some good ones too (both are owned by mattel)...the main difference that i can see between the two brands is that hot wheels is flashier and matchbox tends to be a little more realistic...hot wheels is easily the more popular brand though...there are some international brands like tomica and kyosho (japan) and corgi (uk) that are good, but are harder to find and more expensive...i'm going to have to find a cheap case to display the cars...

i went to the annual hot wheels convention in garden grove, but it was pretty small...about 5-6 rows of tables with people selling their cars...i ended up buying a few 50 cent and 1 dollar cars, because it felt like a waste to go there and pay for entrance and parking but leave with nothing...it was more for hard core collectors who were willing to spend hundreds of dollars per car for super rare or custom ones...there were also hot wheels designers who were signing stuff, and i think they introduced next year's new models...

i also went to a k-mart collector day...this is when k-mart lets people get first access to new hot wheels shipments and happens about 3 to 4 times a year...usually there are more people than cases, so people are given raffle tickets...if your number is called, you can pick a case to open and keep the ones that you like...afterwards, you can look for more that people left behind...the k-mart that i went to had a good ratio of cases to people, so i had the chance to pick a case...i was able to get two curiosity mars rovers and one treasure hunt from the box...the majority of the people there were older men and women in their 40-50's, and the collectors were pretty eager to get at the leftovers to see if people leave behind the more collectible stuff...there was a grandpa wearing a hot wheels tshirt who was pretty anxious to get the cars in my case (probably could tell that i wasn't a typical collector), but he was nice enough to tell me which were worth keeping...i heard some say that he worked at mattel but was a collector too...he ended up buying about 3 cases worth of cars...can't imagine how many cars he has if he started collecting them since they were first introduced...i had several special angry birds hot wheels, but since i'm not a fan of angry birds, i gave them and most of the cars in the case to the grandpa...in hindsight, it might have been better for me to buy them and trade them at frank and sons since they're selling for about 5 bucks each...below is a video about "k-day"...


i've always liked cars and used to collect micro machines as a kid, so maybe it was just a matter of time before i got interested in die cast cars...i still have the micro machines and have seen them in collectible stores for 1 to 5 dollars each, but i don't think there is much demand for them...it's pretty easy to go overboard with hot wheels and matchbox since they're small and fairly cheap, so i have to be careful...i think i'm pretty close to completing my collection for now...they release new models frequently, so there could be other cars that i might want...i look for exotics like ferraris and porsches, older model european and japanese cars, and certain makes like audi, bmw, and volvo...

a site that covers various collecting hobbies including hot wheels/matchbox and die-cast in general...
http://discoverahobby.com/index.php

i also have a few star wars figures (started by wanting to collect jedis and sith only), but my interest in star wars decreased greatly after the prequels and stopped buying them...those were some crappy movies...there are still certain characters in star wars that i like, and i came across a limited revan figure...i caved and ordered it on ebay (i need to stop looking at ebay and spending all my money)...revan is the main character in the knights of the old republic, which is part of the star wars expanded universe (the game also has a cool ship called the ebon hawk that would be great for my collection if they made a model of it)...i don't really consider this a real collection at this point...

haven't opened it yet
thanks to robokel for the yoda/vader bobble heads, large vader/maul, and inara's shuttle...doesn't take up too much space, but the rest of the cars are not pictured
i have a small gun collection, but there have been enough posts about them in my previous posts...also, i've decided that i want to get rid of most of the guns that i have now, and restart my collection...however, i'll hold off buying new guns for now...

the last thing i collect are books, and i won't delve too much into my book collection, since it will probably require its own post...for me, collecting books has a deeper meaning than collecting things like toys...books play an important role in the development of civilization as a whole, and they represent knowledge and progress in physical form...you can argue that it is really the printing press that allowed for the advancement, and digital print is just an evolution of it...however, there are many places in the world where electricity and electronic devices are still a luxury and the best way to spread information is through a real book...books are still a very important medium for spreading ideas, and it is something that is lost on kids growing up in the digital age...there is a reason why the nazis burned books, and reminds me of a well-known and prescient quote by heinrich heine..."where they burn books, they will in the end also burn people"...i can't deny the convenience of e-readers, and i actually would like to have all my books in digital format once they become as easy on the eyes as text on paper...however, i would still collect real books because of what they represent to me and the permanence of something on paper versus digital bits...i might pare it down to about 200 core books that i like, which would consist mostly of classic literature/fiction...i also don't trust the ebook business model, but that is a completely separate topic...

i don't quite share the notion that all books are sacred or have the need to feel and smell books, but the article does show that there are others out there who prefer real books and collect them... http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390444868204578064483923017090.html

if you read this entire post, then i applaud your threshold for crappy rambling...that covers just about everything that i collect...collecting these things is pushing up my geek quotient, but as long as i don't larp or cosplay or play d&d, wow, 40k, or mtg, i should be outside the rarefied echelon of geekdom...what is needed is an official geek hierarchy chart