Showing posts with label ceramics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ceramics. Show all posts

Monday, May 7, 2018

Star Wars Community Digest Issue #10


Tommy and Yehuda write:

 Welcome to the latest issue of Star Wars Community Digest, your place to get summaries about what's going on in the Star Wars collecting community across all of the forums and Facebook groups. We will present the news and current events each week, so that you don't miss anything. Please be aware that many of these are closed Facebook groups though, which means you will need to join them in order to read the conversations. But don't worry, it's free and almost instantaneous.

Participating Groups and Forums:
Star Wars Displays and Advertising
Star Wars Records and Tapes
Star Wars 12 Backs and Early Vintage Collectors Group (A New Hope 1977-79)
Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back Vintage Collecting Group 1980-1982
Star Wars: Return of The Jedi Vintage Collecting Group 1983 - 1985
Star Wars: POTF (Last 17) Vintage Collecting Group 1985
Star Wars: The "Dark Times" Collecting Group (1985-95, Droids & Ewoks, etc)
Jabba's Court - Vintage Star Wars Collectors Group 1977 - 1988
The Imperial Commissary - 1977-1985 Vintage Star Wars Toys, Buy Sell Trade
Power Of The Force Coins
Star Wars bootleg and knockoff collectors
Star Wars Micro Machines and Action Fleet Collecting Group
vintage star wars action figures
The RebelScum vintage forum
Jawa's Outpost (UK and EIRE Star Wars trading group)
Echo Base Vintage Star Wars Trade/Sell/Buy
The Prototype Exchange
The Star Wars Traveler: filming locations and road trips for Star Wars fans
La Guerre des Etoiles Collectors (vintage Star Wars items with French language on them)

If you are an administrator or moderator and would like your community to be a part of this feature, please let us know. We are always happy to include additional groups/forums in our summaries, but be aware that not every group can be featured every week.


In any case, lets get right down to it and get everyone caught up to date on what they may have missed last week...



Disco Ben and Vader


Star Wars vintage bootleg ceramics continue to intrigue with their unintended satirical sculpting of Star Wars characters. Richard Rich reaches out to the community for information on what appears to be a fist bumping disco themed maquette lamp. Join the conversation in the Star Wars Bootleg and Knock Off Collectors Group

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


Simpler Store Displays 


Store displays are designed to have eye-catching appeal and are frequently highlighted in collections due to their dramatic appearance. Collectors discuss the simpler store displays, their collectibility, and their ability to enhance a collection in this thread in the Star Wars Displays and Advertising Group

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


Snap!! 


A collector accidentally breaks off the peg from a figure stand which remains jammed in the figure's foot-hole. The community at Jabba's Court offers several possible methods to remove the peg from the figure without causing damage to the figure. 

The full thread can be found here:


Podcasts


While the Star Wars Community Digest is geared mostly to text-based threads and sources of information, we do suggest that all collectors become familiar with collecting podcasts as well. There are a number of really good vintage-themed podcasts which can help both newer and long-time collectors learn more about collecting and stay up to date on the current events in the hobby. In this thread from the 12 Back Group, the community discusses the topic and identifies their favorite podcasts.

The full thread can be found here:
Good Vintage Podcasts?


A U.S. Kenner ESB45 C-3PO with Removable Limbs Finally Turns Up!


For many years, the community (and especially C-3PO aficionado Bill Cable) has been under the assumption that no Removable Limbs 3POs were released on ESB45-back cards. Despite years of searching, no examples had ever turned up and the figure was thought to have been unreleased on that cardback...but then Bill randomly found one on eBay, of all places! He details the whole story in this thread from the Empire Strikes Back Group (and on his own site, CreatureCantina.com).

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading:
Creature Cantina: Epic Story


One Display to Ruler Them All!


There are few things as beloved in this hobby as the line of Star Wars-themed stationary and school supplies released by Helix in the UK. As areas of collecting go, it's one of the hottest right now, to say nothing of how difficult many of those products are to track down. Which makes this store display for Helix rulers which was limelighted in the Displays and Advertising Group all the most awesome to see!

The full thread can be found here:
Helix Ruler Display

Further reading on the Archive:
Helix items listed in the Archive Database

A Fourth Headman


After many years of searching, collector Paul Chu unearths the 4th known carded UZAY Headman. Paul shares the international journey on his discovery of one of rarest and most coveted Star Wars Bootleg figures.

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


Behind the Scenes Swag


Lucasfilm crew as well as Kenner employees often received exclusive gifts for work on particular projects or for years of service. Collectors discuss this chapter of Star Wars collecting and limelight many exclusive behind the scenes swag in this thread from the Empire Strikes Back group. 

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


A Limelight Worth a Look: Carded Boba Fetts


Chris Eddleman shares a picture of his complete run of carded Empire Strikes Back Boba Fett figures with different mail-away offers, in this thread from the Empire Strikes Back group.

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


It's All Greek to ESB Read Alongs


Sometimes, the coolest items around are the foreign (to the US, at least) releases of vintage items. They're usually MUCH harder to find, since they were often released in significantly smaller quantities, and it's also really cool to see familiar logos in different languages. Such is the case here in this thread from the Star Wars Records and Tapes group. While the standard English language version of the ESB Read Along isn't likely to excite too many people, here we see a super rare Greek language version turn up!

The full thread can be found here:
ESB Greek Read Along

Further reading on the Archive:

From the Furthest Reaches of the Galaxy: Meiji Seika Display


Meiji Seika, a Japanese food company, produced Star Wars themed candies accompanied with small flexible plastic figures and collectors cards. Similar types of small figures were produced in Japan by other companies as well. Collectively they are referred to as Keshigomu or Keshi figures. In this thread in the Displays and Advertising Group, Gus Lopez shares pictures of a very rare vintage store display which illustrates the candy and toys and is accompanied with classic Star Wars imagery. 

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading:


Glue or Goo


A collector shares his concerns about what appears to be glue on the wrists of his large size Boba-Fett action figure. The Imperial Commissary group discusses the reason for the gluey appearance, which turns out to be a form of plastic degradation common with large size action figures. 

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading:


A Limelight Worth a Look: General Mills Card Set and Mailer Wallet


Paul Morrison shares pictures to the 12 Back Group of his General Mills Cereal Star Wars 18 card set accompanied by a Star Wars-emblazoned wallet designed to hold and display the cards. The rarely seen wallet was only available as a mail away offer from General Mills.


Further reading on the Archive:


Another Case of Customs Being Sold as Prototypes


An administrator of the Empire Strikes Back group warns the community about an eBay seller offering multiple custom pieces as pre-production pieces accompanied with false provenance.

The full thread can be found here:


An Original Toys R Us/Early Bird Store Receipt is Found 


Rob Wallace recently bought an original Early Bird envelope which was accompanied by the original Store receipt. Rob shares pictures of this rare piece of ephemera with the Star Wars 12 Back Group, complete with an image of Geoffrey the Giraffe.

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


Pine Sol Display


Whenever the topic of odd licensed Star Wars products is raised, my personal favorite to mention is the vintage promotion from Pine Sol. While one doesn't typically associate floor cleaner with a galaxy far, far away, the company did offer a mail-away for Star Wars flying disks. While the frisbees are hard enough to find, and unopened bottles of the cleaner which featured the promotion are even tougher, I don't think I've ever seen one of the store displays!

The full thread can be found in the Star Wars Displays and Advertising group here:
Pine Sol Shelftalker Display

Revenge of the Jedi Proof Cards Mislabeled as Cardbacks in Recent Auctions 


It appears as if several lucky collectors in the Return of the Jedi Group were able to buy proof cards way below market value due to the poor labeling on several recent eBay auctions. Hopefully they arrive safely and can be authenticated. 

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


Record Number of Porgs


As part of this year's Record Store Day (a promotion to encourage people to visit local record retailers), a special album was released featuring music from The Last Jedi (two tracks), but the record itself was in the shape of a Porg. The promotion was limited to 3,500 copies and was only available at certain record stores. In this thread from the Star Wars Records and Tapes group, collectors spread news about the exclusive.

The full thread can be found here:
Porg Records

Further reading:
Who Else Found the Porg LP?


Our Star Wars Community Digest Time Capsule Thread for this Issue:

"I'd say that debasing themselves this way is a fair indication that Lucas' interest in
the Star Wars saga is low."

While some fans have accused LFL/Disney of destroying their childhoods with The Last Jedi, it is perhaps interesting to remember that Lucas has a long history of destroying childhoods, originally in real-time, rather than retroactively 40 years later.

In 1985, Star Wars was still beloved but obviously on the way out. Fans could feel it. Power of the Force figures were appearing at retail and weren't exactly flying off the shelves. Return of the Jedi had been in theaters for two years, and at that point, if you hadn't seen it, you weren't going to. And even if you had seen it, there was a good chance you didn't like it overly much (or if you did, you weren't posting about it online). Star Wars conversation finally had its own home on ARPANET, in the dedicated net.movies.sw newsgroup, but even that would only last until July of 1985 (the group was eliminated because, according to their reasoning at the time: "There seems little reason to support this group until a new Star Wars epic comes out (years), and we can recreate the group at that time, should the net last so long.") Yes, Star Wars was on its last legs, walking off into the sunset like every space western hero should.

More importantly to some people though, the franchise hadn't "sold out."  Yes, there had been the Holiday Special, but since this was the days before bootleg tapes of that were accessible to fans (in fact, this era pre-dates most home video, period), people generally ignored that. Star Wars was still pure. Commercialized more extensively than anything since Mickey Mouse, but nobody paid attention to that either. Star Wars was something truly special...except for the Ewoks. People posting online in the 80s generally hated them beyond all reason, because THEY RUINED RETURN OF THE JEDI!

*ahem*


Nerd rage in the fandom was at one of its highest points ever. Star Wars fans were being ostracized by the other sci-fi newsgroups, because Star Wars wasn't *real* science fiction. It was too childish. As evidenced by the Ewoks, which RUINED CHILDHOODS AND THE FRANCHISE! (or so the thinking seems to have been at the time).

Which is why it should probably come as no surprise that news of the Droids and Ewoks cartoons wasn't exactly greeted with enthusiasm from the online world. Most of the people posting in newsgroups in the 80s were older fans, who considered ROTJ for children. These were fans posting from universities and military bases, installations which had access to the very expensive computer equipment required to access the internet during that era. These were fans who liked ANH and ESB, but ROTJ was seen as something ridiculous which would probably never catch on. To many of the fans online in the 80s, it was probably for the best that the Trilogy was over and Lucas was taking a break from the saga. And as such, they weren't immediately sold on the idea of the galaxy far, far away coming to Saturday morning cartoon lineups on TVs closer to home. In fact, they were basically never sold on the idea at all. It seems to have been taken as either a horrifying joke, proof that Star Wars was done, or that Star Wars had never been anything special to begin with. Star Wars was for adults, not children!

This would be the first of many times that LFL ruined these people's childhoods.

Still, if you had signed onto ARPANET (or that young upstart Usenet) in Spring and Summer of 1985, these are examples of the kinds of conversations you could have taken part in. Spending your days cracking jokes about how nothing could be worse than Star Wars cartoon shows.

Star Wars Cartoon Series

Ewoks and Nutrasweet

Monday, April 9, 2018

Star Wars Community Digest Issue #8


Tommy and Yehuda write:

 Welcome to the latest issue of Star Wars Community Digest, your place to get summaries about what's going on in the Star Wars collecting community across all of the forums and Facebook groups. We will present the news and current events each week, so that you don't miss anything. Please be aware that many of these are closed Facebook groups though, which means you will need to join them in order to read the conversations. But don't worry, it's free and almost instantaneous.

Participating Groups and forums:
Star Wars Displays and Advertising
Star Wars Records and Tapes
Star Wars 12 Backs and Early Vintage Collectors Group (A New Hope 1977-79)
Star Wars: The Empire Strikes Back Vintage Collecting Group 1980-1982
Star Wars: Return of The Jedi Vintage Collecting Group 1983 - 1985
Star Wars: POTF (Last 17) Vintage Collecting Group 1985
Star Wars: The "Dark Times" Collecting Group (1985-95, Droids & Ewoks, etc)
Jabba's Court - Vintage Star Wars Collectors Group 1977 - 1988
The Imperial Commissary - 1977-1985 Vintage Star Wars Toys, Buy Sell Trade
Power Of The Force Coins
Star Wars bootleg and knockoff collectors
Star Wars Micro Machines and Action Fleet Collecting Group
vintage star wars action figures
The RebelScum vintage forum
Jawa's Outpost (UK and EIRE Star Wars trading group)
Echo Base Vintage Star Wars Trade/Sell/Buy
The Prototype Exchange

If you are an administrator or moderator and would like your community to be a part of this feature, please let us know. We are always happy to include additional groups/forums in our summaries, but be aware that not every group can be featured every week.

In any case, lets get right down to it and get everyone caught up to date on what they may have missed last week...



Jabba Line Art Boxes: Legit or Custom?


What starts out as a collector in the Echo Base group warning the community about the fact he was scammed on a line art Jabba the Hutt set, quickly turns into a thread about whether or not ALL line art Jabba the Hutt sets are a scam. Legend has it that they are either a department store catalog variation or were created by a collector in the 1990s using factory overstock. The community debates the issue.

The full thread can be found here:
Jabba Line art boxes

Further reading:
Line Art Jabba boxes: Did stores really use them?  


Star Wars and the Old West


 As a cost and time saving measure, toy companies including Kenner would reuse older toy designs and toy molds on new lines with added modifications. Kenner reused the molds from their Creature Cantina action playset to produce their Real West Cafe playset as part of their Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid line. The familiar similar features of the toys make for an interesting comparison in this thread from the Imperial Commissary. 

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:
Recycling the Force


Fake Holiday Special Figures Turn Up on eBay


If you've been following the Star Wars Community Digest, you know that we are entirely against unmarked customs of actual prototypes. They can confuse buyers. Such is (in our opinion) the case with a recent series of auctions on eBay. All of them are advertised as customs in the auction title, but then the description includes such misleading details as "All prototypes in this auction are actually figures [the Kenner designer] himself designed and engineered or hand painted." But the figures being auctioned off aren't prototypes. At all.

To be clear: these are toys created in the modern era, allegedly by an ex-employee. Whether that is actually the case or not, it still doesn't justify the HUGE ending price. Generally speaking, no one pays $2,100 for three custom figures, unless they're confused by the misleading item description and assume they are genuine prototypes. Or maybe they just have a TON of money to waste on loose toys that someone has recently played arts and crafts with. Either way, auctions like these would be a lot clearer if the artist had marked them as reproductions in some way. Then, the people who were interested in owning them would know what they were buying, and no one would lose money because of vague and misleading descriptions.

The community also identifies other problems with this series of auctions, from accusations of shill bidding to reports of fake autographs being peddled by the same seller.

The full thread discussing these auctions can be found here:
Custom Holiday Special Figures on eBay

Further reading on the Archive:
Genuine set of Conceptual Chewbacca Family Figures from the SW Holiday Special
(As an editors note: the SW Community Digest would again urge the community to only purchase replicas from responsible artists who protect collectors from future fraud by marking their creations as replicas in some obvious and permanent way. The artists are in the best position to ensure that no one is mislead or defrauded. If they refuse to mark them, they are simply emboldening scammers or are in league with them, and that should never be supported by the community. If it isn't marked as a replica, don't buy from that artist. Period.)


 Sears Canada Skin-Wrapped Figures


In 1980-1981, Sears stores throughout Canada offered multipacks of carded figures which each included an early release of one of 7 new figures for The Empire Strikes Back. These figures were released prior to the production of the individual cardback art and figure bubbles. The figures were released on black cards with the figures skin-wrapped to the cardback.

David Gaule limelight’s his collection of Sears Canada skin-wrapped figures in this thread from the Empire Strikes Back group

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading:


Bucket Coin Find: Part IV


Way back in our first issue of Star Wars Community Digest we detailed a find of POTF coins, which had some troubling abnormalities about them. As time has gone on, the community has debated whether or not the coins were genuine or fakes. Last week, the POTF Coin group returned to the issue to see what the consensus was.

The full thread can be found here:
Bucket Find: Part 4

Further reading:

Bootleg Ceramic Star Wars Lamps


Follow the conversation as it delves into the variety and the origins of early bootleg ceramic lamps in this thread from the Star Wars 12-Backs group. 

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:

Sigma Ceramics Vader Display


A collector asks the Star Wars Store Displays and Advertising group for information on this interesting store display. As it turns out, it's an awesome shelving display used to sell the vintage ceramics released by the Sigma company.

The full thread can be found here:
Sigma Vader Display

Further reading on the Archive:
Sigma entries on The Archive Database


Unproduced Droids & Ewoks and their Continued Appreciation


The unproduced second wave of Droids and Ewoks figures which were proposed in 1985 were never released as the entire Kenner Star Wars toy line was canceled. These figures still exist in single digit numbers in variable pre-production stages acquired from Kenner employees. The continued allure of these figures remains strong for many collectors and is discussed in this thread from the Empire Strikes Back group.

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


Landspeeders with Sticker Details to Apply


A rare Landspeeder variant from Australia is found in Canada. Follow how Australian vehicles migrated to North American retailers in 1978 in this thread from the Imperial Commissary.

The full thread can be found here:

Further reading:


Burger King Displays Were Hot Last Week


Promotional displays for the vintage Burger King glasses were all over the Displays group last week, and they were all awesome! While the glasses themselves are semi-ubiquitous, the displays are always a real treat to see, particularly when they're as rare as these examples are!

The threads in question can be found here:

Further reading on the Archive:


Our Star Wars Community Digest Time Capsule Thread for this Issue: 

A period show report from the 1983 LosCon Sci-Fi Convention 


In late 1982, Lucasfilm sent its representatives to the LosCon sci-fi convention to promote Return of the Jedi, which would be released the following year. ARPANET user "RAND@sri-unix" returned from the convention, signed into the net.sf-lovers newsgroup (it's like a discussion forum mixed with email, only from waaaaaay back in the day), and shared his thoughts on the event and the shocking information he was able to garner from it.

For instance, as it turns out, LFL confirmed that Obi-Wan was a ghost in ROTJ (or as the representative is quoted as saying: "He's still dead, or in heaven or wherever Jedi go when they die"). Other interesting tidbits is the first announcement of Mon Mothma to the Star Wars fandom... despite the fact that someone was reportedly already at the convention cosplaying Mon Mothma. Which is really weird. And also impressive. I can only assume it was the character herself, searching for more Bothans to ruthlessly sacrifice for the greater good.

In any event, if you're interested in the early days of the Star Wars fandom or the history of sci-fi conventions in general, this is an interesting thread. 

It can be found here: