Hi everyone,
Firstly, it's good to be back: back collecting again (both vintage and modern), and also coming back to this fine forum. I joined in 2013, found this site to be a hive of valuable information willingly passed on from a great bunch of people- a real find back in the day!
Returning to the fold some 10 years later, I've picked up on some comments in various threads how it's a little quieter on here these days. Various reasons from what I can gather (life getting in the way and all that, which I totally understand), but another I've seen seems to be a mass migration to Facebook groups. I left social media behind a good few years ago (and I don't miss it and have zero desire to return, in all honesty!) but I'm interested to hear anybody's view on this: be it a positive or negative experience. I can see it's really had an impact on the For Sale activity on here, I was thinking I'd be making plenty of purchases through SWFUK again from trusted sellers old and new... but I see that's not the case in 2026.
I'd also be interested in hearing from collectors that are still active on here how their views and collecting habits have changed over the last decade, namely on things that I remember bringing a strong reaction back then, one way or the other. One being a staunch debate on the validity of grading from those for and against. Another is the Toy Tonis that are out there in the vintage collecting world. I remember seeing that unfold in 2013, and I know Jason Smith lost a lot of money before he realised and raised his concerns. Do people collect these now, do they have their own market, so to speak? I'm curious to know if collectors have mellowed on these topics (and any others you can think of) with the passing of time?
I know nothing stays the same, and I'm getting a little better at responding more openly to change as I get older. SWFUK still feels like home, though. Anyhow, I'll stop rambling on! Some of you may remember I was known for penning 20,000 word essays as a matter of course on a daily basis... you'll be glad to know some things don't change!!
Cheers,
Martin
P.S. I see that's only 416 words, so I'll give myself a pat on the back for keeping it short and concise...
Firstly, it's good to be back: back collecting again (both vintage and modern), and also coming back to this fine forum. I joined in 2013, found this site to be a hive of valuable information willingly passed on from a great bunch of people- a real find back in the day!
Returning to the fold some 10 years later, I've picked up on some comments in various threads how it's a little quieter on here these days. Various reasons from what I can gather (life getting in the way and all that, which I totally understand), but another I've seen seems to be a mass migration to Facebook groups. I left social media behind a good few years ago (and I don't miss it and have zero desire to return, in all honesty!) but I'm interested to hear anybody's view on this: be it a positive or negative experience. I can see it's really had an impact on the For Sale activity on here, I was thinking I'd be making plenty of purchases through SWFUK again from trusted sellers old and new... but I see that's not the case in 2026.
I'd also be interested in hearing from collectors that are still active on here how their views and collecting habits have changed over the last decade, namely on things that I remember bringing a strong reaction back then, one way or the other. One being a staunch debate on the validity of grading from those for and against. Another is the Toy Tonis that are out there in the vintage collecting world. I remember seeing that unfold in 2013, and I know Jason Smith lost a lot of money before he realised and raised his concerns. Do people collect these now, do they have their own market, so to speak? I'm curious to know if collectors have mellowed on these topics (and any others you can think of) with the passing of time?
I know nothing stays the same, and I'm getting a little better at responding more openly to change as I get older. SWFUK still feels like home, though. Anyhow, I'll stop rambling on! Some of you may remember I was known for penning 20,000 word essays as a matter of course on a daily basis... you'll be glad to know some things don't change!!
Cheers,
Martin
P.S. I see that's only 416 words, so I'll give myself a pat on the back for keeping it short and concise...