Sue,

I started getting posters around the age of 10 at the beginning of the 
1960's...almost all of it from Poster Exchanges that I had discovered.  I would 
order classic horror stuff from the Exchanges and didn't get that much, though 
in retrospect it all looks pretty rare now. 

While I knew of all the great horror films, I didn't know about much else. Our 
local theatre had a "Clffhangers Club" on Saturdays. It was all kids in the 
audience with the occasional adult chaperone.The "Cliffhangers Club" had a 
drawing for prizes and showed a serial chapter and two movies. Usually it was 
something somewhat contemporary like Jason and the Argonauts and a more modern 
western, like a Roy Rogers Tru-Color or Son of Paleface as opposed to an older 
Black and White like Arizona Kid or Shine on Harvest Moon (which would have had 
superior posters, in my opinion). 

I was unaware of the beautiful posters for the various Buck Jones films until a 
got a little older. So, I mostly ordered posters from the Services where a had 
some sort of reference as a 10-15 year old audience member.

Besides the fact that some of these Poster Services must have had copies of 
Wizard of Oz, Gilda, Gone with the Wind of which I wasn't cognoscente, they 
also had lots of material which was available and quite rare. Some of the 
Poster Services with which I dealt would cut or fold Window Cards in half to 
function as cardboard protection for your order. So I have various Clara Bow, 
W.C. Fields, and Buster Keaton silent Window Cards, which I received neatly cut 
in half or folded to protect my Apache Rose or Monster and the Ape one sheet 
order. I would have never ordered them at the time or even been aware of their 
titles. It makes me wonder what kind of stock they most have had and how they 
were already throwing away "useless" silent posters and who knows what else.
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Susan Heim 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Friday, April 13, 2012 12:43 PM
  Subject: Re: [MOPO] An auction house to avoid


  I think Kirby has a very valid point. I have collected for over 38 years and 
I met collectors back in the day that started collecting in the late 50's and 
early 60's and their main focus was early Horror material or Westerns. Many of 
the collectors that started looking for "finds" in the later part of the 60's 
that I know shifted to the classic titles. Perhaps it was that more and more 
people were getting into the hobby at that point and trying to find items they 
thought would be more scarce first off. I began collecting in 1973 and I 
collected posters from my favorite movies, which happened to be Hitchcock and 
MGM Musicals. Of course, I now wish my favorites had been early Universal 
Horror!! Even the realart rereleases were dirt cheap then....
   
  Sue
  www.hollywoodposterframes.com
   

  > Date: Fri, 13 Apr 2012 13:59:44 -0500
  > From: [email protected]
  > Subject: Re: [MOPO] An auction house to avoid
  > To: [email protected]
  > 
  > Grey et al,
  > 
  > What I was intending to communicate is that I think with HORROR posters, 
there was an early-on cult of collectors for this stuff in a way
  > that there wasn't for standard Hollywood fare, even A-picture Hollywood 
Fare like comedies, drama, biopics etc. Westerns have some of this 
  > same genre-based history, I think, too. So people from a much earlier 
period had an interest in aggregating posters.
  > 
  > 
  > 
  > K.
  > 
  > On Apr 13, 2012, at 12:46 PM, Smith, Grey - 1367 wrote:
  > 
  > > I disagree.
  > > The only reason we are aware, more or less, of exact counts on the horror 
posters for these classics is that they are so actively desired and collected 
and that counts have been made of what exists. They are very collectible.
  > > If a group of collectors is buying Bankhead I can almost assure you that 
they know how many known copies of Devil and the Deep and Faithless are out 
there. They are keeping track of it and there are no doubt as many copies of 
some of those titles as the horror classics. 
  > > Just as those in the collecting circles for Bogart know how many for 
Petrified Forest are known or for Cagney, Footlight Parade or Hard to Hold.
  > > 
  > > -----Original Message-----
  > > From: MoPo List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Kirby 
McDaniel
  > > Sent: Friday, April 13, 2012 12:34 PM
  > > To: [email protected]
  > > Subject: Re: [MOPO] An auction house to avoid
  > > 
  > > Bruce is correct here. If as many folks had been as enamored of Tallulah 
Bankhead as were of Bela Lugosi, you might be able to find the occasional one 
sheet of THE CHEAT.
  > > 
  > > K.
  > > 
  > > On Apr 13, 2012, at 12:21 PM, Bruce Hershenson wrote:
  > > 
  > >> Good poit Jay. I contend that the Universal horror titles of the 1930s 
  > >> are often among the most COMMON posters for those years! Can you find 
  > >> many 1931 titles where there are more one-sheets known than 
  > >> Frankenstein? Or 1933 titles where there are more one-sheets known 
  > >> than King Kong?
  > >> 
  > >> Bruce
  > >> 
  > >> On 4/13/12, Jay Nemeth-Johannes <[email protected]> 
wrote:
  > >>> Well, I have items that I believe are one of a kind. For example a 1 
  > >>> sheet for a Richard Dix silent "The Glorious Fool", but I have no way 
  > >>> to prove it is unique. I expect that much of the paper for early 
  > >>> silents is rare to nonexistant, especially for lost films.
  > >>> 
  > >>> It is easier when the film is iconic and everyone is trying to find 
  > >>> an example. Any Dracula find is going to get widespread press.
  > >>> 
  > >>> My guess on why some stuff is more available is pure chance that it 
  > >>> was initially printed in too large a quantity and somebody warehoused 
  > >>> it for decades. Laziness rules where a more efficient person throws 
  > >>> away the "useless" trash.
  > >>> 
  > >>> Jay
  > >>> 
  > >>> 
  > >>> On 04/13/12 11:16 AM, Phillip W. Ayling wrote:
  > >>>> It would be great if these same all-knowing censustakers could also 
  > >>>> tell us "three known fakes currently being offered". While it makes 
  > >>>> big news whenever a Dracula one-sheet or a Chaplain 6sheet is found 
  > >>>> in a barn, I wouldn't be surprised if amongst MoPo members there are 
  > >>>> some items that are extremely rare or have never been inventoried by 
  > >>>> an auction house, so "they don't exist".
  > >>>> 
  > >>>> 
  > >>>> Thanks for any insight anyone might have.
  > >>>> 
  > >>>> 
  > >>> 
  > >>> Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
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  > >>> 
  > >> 
  > >> 
  > >> --
  > >> Bruce Hershenson and the other 24 members of the eMoviePoster.com team 
  > >> P.O. Box 874 West Plains, MO 65775
  > >> Phone: 417-256-9616 (hours: Mon-Fri 9 to 5 except from 12 to 1 when we 
  > >> take
  > >> lunch)
  > >> our site <http://www.emovieposter.com/> our auctions 
  > >> <http://www.emovieposter.com/agallery/all.html>
  > >> <http://www.emovieposter.com/unused/signature/20111028Frankensteinempl
  > >> oyeegroupphotosignature.jpg>
  > >> 
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  > > 
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