"what I didn’t like was the bunches of posters in the closets, never being 
displayed, basically being collected without a sense of purpose in life"

I feel exactly the same way.  Posters should be seen not hidden away in some 
"Ark of the Covenant" government warehouse.  There are so many films out there 
that I would like to have paper for but there's only so much wall space in my 
house.  I also decided to frame what I want to keep and sell the rest.

Since I'm fairly new to the hobby I don't have a poster related regret however 
I still kick myself for the 12-16 Gretzky rookie cards I sold for basically 
peanuts many many years ago. 


________________________________
 From: "Walton, Jeffrey" <jeffrey.wal...@fisglobal.com>
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU 
Sent: Thursday, May 24, 2012 9:47:12 AM
Subject: Re: [MOPO] The One That Got Away
 

 
I don’t think I truly ever regretted selling a poster-  maybe I have a little 
dealer in me.  Most of the times I sell posters to trade up to something I 
really want, so I’ll gather a few lesser posters and help snag that holy 
grail.  Both Bruce and Grey have helped me with my quests and now I have some 
nice posters to proudly display…no Frankenstein or Dracula but pieces I’ve 
always admired. Truth of the matter turns out, there is always a holy grail and 
once the clouds part and the ray of sunshine illuminates that prized piece and 
it’s in your hands, the feeling of excitement fades rather quickly for it’s the 
hunt that’s the exhilarating part.
 
I recently looked my walls and made a decision.  See I like the posters I have 
framed hanging in various rooms of my house...what I didn’t like was the 
bunches of posters in the closets, never being displayed, basically being 
collected without a sense of purpose in life.  So late last year I made almost 
a life changing decision - I sold most of my stored collection realizing it was 
never going to make the walls of fame. I turned that cash (a nice size chunk no 
less) into something I really wanted…and it wasn’t another poster.  It was a 
bar.  A bar almost like the one I was raised in…well spent most of my life 
in…and not on the drinking end…the serving end.  So now I have a full working 
late 19th century apothecary bar complete with two taps, ice machine, 
dishwasher, fridge, and a ton of scotch and other libations of choice and I 
have my posters to thank for that.   I spent over 20 years collecting most of 
those posters and they just
 took up space in the closet…what I got in return was a place we use every 
weekend even weeknights, a place for family and friends to hang, a place to 
relax, a place to watch the game…a place to see some of my posters on display.  
Who knew the power of posters?  Now that my closets are bare again I’m sure 
there are a few new pieces on my horizon....and who knows just what they might 
be turned into this time around.
 
 
 
From:MoPo List [mailto:mopo-l@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU] On Behalf Of Bruce 
Hershenson
Sent: Wednesday, May 23, 2012 6:55 PM
To: MoPo-L@LISTSERV.AMERICAN.EDU
Subject: Re: [MOPO] The One That Got Away
 
Good topic! I have tens of thousands of pressbooks in my collection, and I have 
a firm rule to never sell any I don't have a dupe of. I have turned down some 
incredible offers for ones from "specialists" (a Chaplin collector want's this 
one, a Harlow collector wants that one, etc).

My logic is that once I start selling, I might keep going, and of course the 
ones I would sell would be the absolute hardest ones to ever get back.

Well one day about ten years ago I let Morrie Everett, a man who could sell ice 
to Eskimos or hot coffee to the Devil himself, talk me into selling him the 
pressbook for Trouble in Paradise.

Of course I regretted it the next day, and I have looked for it relentlessly, 
but no luck.

But at least that was the ONLY non-dupe pressbook I have ever sold and that is 
the one that got away (for me)!

Bruce
On Wed, May 23, 2012 at 5:47 PM, Rix Posterz <rixpost...@aol.com> wrote:
About 25 years ago, I sold a "Return Of Dr. X" 1/2 Sheet (Bogart, 1939) because 
I needed the money to pay bills,  I've sold many better posters since then, but 
at that time I was really, really into collecting,,,this was way before I 
started selling in MCW, on eBay or otherwise. For some reason, selling that 
poster still remains to this day as one of the only regrets that has stayed 
with me through the years.  After I started dealing the stuff, my whole reality 
slowly changed where I'd get over selling a piece from my collection fairly 
quickly.
But this was back when I wasjust a collector. Many months and even years later, 
I was thinking about "the one that got away"....                        Rick
 
In a message dated 5/23/2012 3:31:49 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time, 
gkud...@rocketmail.com writes:
Of all the movie posters I've had in my life, the ones I miss the most are some 
Japanese fabric banners used to line buildings and streets advertising a film. 
> 
>I got these in the early 70's. 3 were of no-name B movies, but the 4th was for 
>Akira Kurasawa's Dodeskaden....
> 
>It wasn't their value so much as they were great looking rectangular flags -- 
>I think they were 2'x6', maybe longer.
> 
>What poster do you regret not having anymore?
>Visit the MoPo Mailing List Web Site at www.filmfan.com
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-- 
Bruce Hershenson and the other 26 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
our auctions

 
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