![]() And then a non-acetate Venom cover for the Sunday that Black Flag said they had been sitting on for two years that no one has seen, being released for the show.You knew it would come back to the toilets, didn’t you? Just take one look behind Pritzker’s laugh - that “Hey, I’m rich and I’m governor and I can buy liberals and I’m having so much fun being Mike Madigan’s butler” laugh. The extra set of staples were part of the manufacturing process of attaching the acetate cover, and not considered a defect." However, collectors on their board seem not happy with that response as it didn't address the fact that it was the store rather than the publisher who made the alteration.īlack Flag also confirmed they had created two more acetate covers for Boston Fan EXPO this weekend, Ghost Rider on Friday, and Deadpool on Saturday, with 100 copies in one line for people who want one copy each, at over $100 each and another line for retailers/resellers/influencers. An acetate variant cover was attached with an extra set of staples, to which CGC assigned a Universal grade and a notation of "acetate cover" on the label. An example is Stray Dogs #1 from last year. There is a precedent for acetate covers being attached to a printed book, and then graded by CGC. We treated them as we would any other variant cover that's attached with an extra set of staples after the book was printed, and at times these books included the original cover as well. the normal 2" and if this would be a precedent.ĬGC has issued an official response "with an explanation of our thought process behind the grade assignments. CGC user captainzombie asked "I am baffled how CGC would grade these considering that there are 4 staples on this vs. Opening it up to anyone to amend covers in this way, and then sell them, is something Marvel will not allow.ĬGC has also been criticised for grading this comic without noting that a) it is not an official variant cover and has been altered and b) the original grade of the cover must have been damaged by having a new cover stapled into it. While retailer-exclusive covers have been popular in the market, publishers have to approve them for branding and taste issues, and to avoid possible controversies. I am sure David Gabriel SVP Print, Sales & Marketing at Marvel, is having fascinating conversations with Black Flag Comics right about now, while stopping copycat moves from other retailers. Today, Bleeding Cool has been able to confirm that Marvel Comics did not approve Black Flag's addition of an acetate cover as a further variant, and it is also not something they would permit. A now-deleted-but- reposted-to-YouTube video explanation by Black Flag stated that they allowed those retailers to pay in advance towards the production process.īut concern about how the comic was sold soon turned to curiosity about how it was made. But copies of this new version of the comic have sold on eBay for up to $350 each, with a 9.9 CGC graded version selling for up to $2000. ![]() And then, Black Flag upped the price of the remaining copies to $100 each and still sold out. Initially, there were complaints from the collectors who stood in line when the show opened after other retailers/Instagrammers/influencers/whatnot sellers could walk up and buy a hundred copies at a time for $85 each. ![]() Then sold it as a retailer variant exclusive at last weekend's C2E2 show in Chicago for $85 each.Īnd they have been making bank. And made it a patriotic thing, with the cover stamp saying USA, the United States flag, the words In God We InTrust, and citing it as an Infinite Black Publishing production. So what did Black Flag do? They created a new acetate cover and stapled it over the top of the remaining 750 copies of the unsold comic they had in stock. The juice seemed to have gone out of that one. A CGC 9.8 slabbed copy recently sold for $36 on eBay, which is basically the cost of the slab. ![]() A while ago, they commissioned an exclusive retailer variant by Crain for the Ultimate Fallout #4 facsimile that Marvel put out last year, reprinting the first appearance of Miles Morales. They regularly commission a number of exclusive variant covers to comics, often drawn by friend-of-the-store Clayton Crain. Comic book store Black Flag Comics has been doing something different in a very entrepreneurial fashion.
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