Now then! What's the biggest regret you've made in your Star Wars collecting over the years? One (or maybe two?) that you've managed to banish to the furthest recesses of your mind, telling yourself it doesn't matter; only to experience the memory rear it's ugly head from time to time and bring with it those pangs of anguish and heartache?
Personally, a couple spring to mind:
When I found this forum in 2013, I was very green in regards to collecting. I still had a lot of my childhood figures and vehicles, and I began thinking about expanding my collection. Within a couple of weeks of getting to know this site, I decided to put up for sale on eBay my ticket and programme to The Empire Strikes Back for the European royal premiere at Leicester Square which took place on May 20th 1980. My Mum somehow got tickets for this event (she was a marvel at sourcing anything and everything, especially hard to find Star Wars goodies... long before the internet, I've no idea how she did it). I had a bit of a gung-ho attitude to what vintage rarities I had in my possession, back then. Anyhow, they sold for a good few hundred quid, and they went to a buyer in the States who I seem to recall worked for Pixar. Do I regret it now? Yes. Almost on a daily basis!
One other regret that always springs to mind concerns a vinyl cape Jawa. My local toy store in the 1970s was called Youngsters, and on weekly trips in to town with my parents aged 8 years old it was always a treat to call in there. I started collecting Star Wars Weekly in February 1978, so I was well aware at the impending release of the figures from Palitoy through the adverts contained within the pages of that comic. Summer 1978 arrived and carded figures with that iconic red, white and blue logo started filling out the shop. I was in awe. My first purchase was a Stormtrooper. A few weeks later after saving up my pocket money, I decided on a Jawa. This being early on in the release of the First 12, it had a vinyl cape. And it was on a Palitoy card as my local toyshop didn't start receiving Kenner branded merchandise until around 1981 onwards (I remember seeing that Kenner logo for the first time, and feeling angry that someone had taken over Palitoy. The thoughts that run through an inexperienced young mind!). Fast forward a few months and I'm in the playground at primary school and my mate proudly shows me his new Jawa that had a cloth cloak. I never liked my vinyl caped figure, in all honesty... so seeing this in more realistic attire, I immediately opened negotiations on what he was prepared to take for a swap. Deal secured, I thought I'd done good. Decades later, I now realise how coveted that first wave Jawa was.
I'm realistic enough not to bemoan ripping off that bubble of the Palitoy card before I even left the toy shop, toys were meant to be enjoyed and played with. But I do wish I'd hung on to my original purchase!
99p for a Palitoy Vinyl Cape Jawa in 1978. We've all said it before, but if only we had a bloody crystal ball at the time
Personally, a couple spring to mind:
When I found this forum in 2013, I was very green in regards to collecting. I still had a lot of my childhood figures and vehicles, and I began thinking about expanding my collection. Within a couple of weeks of getting to know this site, I decided to put up for sale on eBay my ticket and programme to The Empire Strikes Back for the European royal premiere at Leicester Square which took place on May 20th 1980. My Mum somehow got tickets for this event (she was a marvel at sourcing anything and everything, especially hard to find Star Wars goodies... long before the internet, I've no idea how she did it). I had a bit of a gung-ho attitude to what vintage rarities I had in my possession, back then. Anyhow, they sold for a good few hundred quid, and they went to a buyer in the States who I seem to recall worked for Pixar. Do I regret it now? Yes. Almost on a daily basis!
One other regret that always springs to mind concerns a vinyl cape Jawa. My local toy store in the 1970s was called Youngsters, and on weekly trips in to town with my parents aged 8 years old it was always a treat to call in there. I started collecting Star Wars Weekly in February 1978, so I was well aware at the impending release of the figures from Palitoy through the adverts contained within the pages of that comic. Summer 1978 arrived and carded figures with that iconic red, white and blue logo started filling out the shop. I was in awe. My first purchase was a Stormtrooper. A few weeks later after saving up my pocket money, I decided on a Jawa. This being early on in the release of the First 12, it had a vinyl cape. And it was on a Palitoy card as my local toyshop didn't start receiving Kenner branded merchandise until around 1981 onwards (I remember seeing that Kenner logo for the first time, and feeling angry that someone had taken over Palitoy. The thoughts that run through an inexperienced young mind!). Fast forward a few months and I'm in the playground at primary school and my mate proudly shows me his new Jawa that had a cloth cloak. I never liked my vinyl caped figure, in all honesty... so seeing this in more realistic attire, I immediately opened negotiations on what he was prepared to take for a swap. Deal secured, I thought I'd done good. Decades later, I now realise how coveted that first wave Jawa was.
I'm realistic enough not to bemoan ripping off that bubble of the Palitoy card before I even left the toy shop, toys were meant to be enjoyed and played with. But I do wish I'd hung on to my original purchase!
99p for a Palitoy Vinyl Cape Jawa in 1978. We've all said it before, but if only we had a bloody crystal ball at the time
