pizzathehutt
Sith Lord
paploo!
x-pack said:Virtually all modern but by the end I was starting to like the collection 8) That room looked amazing!
Thought the valuation for the Lego clone trooper was a bit OTT. At the end of the day even though only five were made it's still modern. Are there any collectors out there who would spend a grand on a Lego clone trooper?
Palifan said:x-pack said:Virtually all modern but by the end I was starting to like the collection 8) That room looked amazing!
Thought the valuation for the Lego clone trooper was a bit OTT. At the end of the day even though only five were made it's still modern. Are there any collectors out there who would spend a grand on a Lego clone trooper?
I enjoyed watching it as no matter if it was modern or vintage it was still Star Wars goodies. Streamlining the collection was definitely the way to go as for me those Darth Tater type items seem too much like a novelty item (each to their own though and all that). It did all look really good on display in it's purpose built room and is something that I often think about with having things just stored in boxes, what's the point if you can't see it? As I've only ever had a small display case I have to rotate things to give them an airing which at least means I get to rotate my collection and also I don't just stick to Star Wars as there are so many other vintage toy lines out there that I love.
One thing I have noticed recently is the price of lego on the rise for sets that have been discontinued. I saw a top 10 list recently (a friend showed me but I annoyingly can't find it at the moment), and some of the price increases were crazy for unopened boxes going back only 3 or 4 years. Maybe the valuation for that Clone Trooper wouldn't be that far off for a big lego collector.
These home made lego masterpieces are pretty impressive!
http://brickgalaxy.com/best-lego-star-wars-models/
Ian
Caswellbot said:35,000 pieces. I know lots of it May not be worth much but even if you said each piece was worth 1.50 each that's over 45k
jedisearcher said:I also did the 35k x £1.50 maths :lol:
However, I think if he really added up them up he'd have paid a lot more than the quoted £20k-£25k. For the maths to work he'd have had to be buying stuff for about 75p each and he had cartons of figures, big lego sets, lightsabers etc. I'm not sure we're you get those for 75p :wink: I mean, you can't even get a single lego mini figure for that.
shawn_k said:I was a bit disappointed that during the history lesson on the toys that there wasn't a mention of Palitoy's involvement.
Simply Sci-fi said:I'd like to ask James if his house really was that cluttered originally. The kid's bedrooms? Did the BBC over egg the situation for the cameras?
x-pack said:Palifan said:x-pack said:Virtually all modern but by the end I was starting to like the collection 8) That room looked amazing!
Thought the valuation for the Lego clone trooper was a bit OTT. At the end of the day even though only five were made it's still modern. Are there any collectors out there who would spend a grand on a Lego clone trooper?
I enjoyed watching it as no matter if it was modern or vintage it was still Star Wars goodies. Streamlining the collection was definitely the way to go as for me those Darth Tater type items seem too much like a novelty item (each to their own though and all that). It did all look really good on display in it's purpose built room and is something that I often think about with having things just stored in boxes, what's the point if you can't see it? As I've only ever had a small display case I have to rotate things to give them an airing which at least means I get to rotate my collection and also I don't just stick to Star Wars as there are so many other vintage toy lines out there that I love.
One thing I have noticed recently is the price of lego on the rise for sets that have been discontinued. I saw a top 10 list recently (a friend showed me but I annoyingly can't find it at the moment), and some of the price increases were crazy for unopened boxes going back only 3 or 4 years. Maybe the valuation for that Clone Trooper wouldn't be that far off for a big lego collector.
These home made lego masterpieces are pretty impressive!
http://brickgalaxy.com/best-lego-star-wars-models/
Ian
When I saw the Falcon Lego set and a few other things I thought he must have spent a fortune. Don't those things go for around £100 new! :shock:
He had the Death Star set and i used to see them going for silly money on Ebay. Either way, I think he wasn't up for telling his wife the full cost. But then, who does :lol:
David Tree said:Simply Sci-fi said:I'd like to ask James if his house really was that cluttered originally. The kid's bedrooms? Did the BBC over egg the situation for the cameras?
Genuinely ... it was pretty accurate
I cannot comment on the selling, what went where or otherwise, but I can say James honestly isn't alone, I know several collectors who have collections on a frightening level, to the point most of it exists in boxes/ crates etc. As someone who spends their life in this, it is far more common than most realize, but the norm is to demonize in the media and to be fair to the programme makers, they could have easily spun this the other way, rather than the mostly positive portrayal they gave.
I noticed that, too. Very odd. There can't be many people in the world who don't know which is the back, and which is the front on an R2 unit. Obviously the assistant to the cameraman is of this small group who are totally oblivious to astromech etiquette.walkie said:Did anyone spot that they always showed the vintage R2 back to front?
Hear, hear- I'll second that. I briefly met Mr Burns at the 30th anniversary screening of ROTJ. Thoroughly nice chap, and this episode made for very entertaining viewing.SublevelStudios said:Totally agree, they could have ripped James apart and made him look a fool if they chose to (and that goes for any of the collectors in the series), with editing etc... but what this series does is actually inform and educate, instead of ridicule, which would probably make for more entertaining tv for the majority. It also helps the collector highlight their concerns or issues and helps to overcome them.
Pretty decent tv for a change.
Simply Sci-fi said:The eventual display room was spartan to say the least, with only a few hundred items on show and not a great deal of storage space. A great example of storing and displaying a collection can be found here; https://www.flickr.com/photos/eyespive/sets/72157626206574177/
Craig.