I find that most people in my life have at least one “thing” they are collecting. It is often an insight into their personality and it is fun to hear people talk about something they are passionate about.

  • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Comic books. I learned to read when I was 2, but there wasn’t a ton of reading material for 2 year olds.

    Back then, comic books were only a quarter and soooo… 52 years later…

    The big one:

    I also run the comic books community on lemmy.world. Pop by and say hello!

      • @jordanlund@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        I didn’t, but the video is kind of strange for me because from at least the 80s forward everyone knew who Carl Barks was. There were compilations under his name and all sorts of reprints and such.

        Bonus: At the end of his life, he lived like 80 miles away from me. (!)

    • Lunch
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      31 year ago

      What an awesome collection! Funny question, but do you by any chance have these backed up? Personally would be so scared that anything of the physical copies would be damaged or ruined by a house fire for example… Guess I’m a little paranoid 😅

    • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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      21 year ago

      I donated one to charity a couple years back, but I used to have two copies of the Spawn EWU cover variant. I suspect I was the only person on the planet to have two of those. Not sure what to do with the other one it’s the only comic I own and I’ve never even opened it

        • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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          1 year ago

          Finding proper value on it has been difficult because there are so few you almost never see them for sale. The most I’ve ever been offered for mine is $7k, ungraded. I’ve definitely seen them sell for way less though it’s just so rare I think the data isn’t very reliable. Very much a ‘how much is it worth to the specific collector at that time’

          Edit to add, how tf do I actually get this thing graded? I tried years ago and they sent it back to me after months of back and forth because they couldn’t figure out how much it was worth so they didn’t know how much to charge me. The whole situation was a mess

  • jevans ⁂
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    241 year ago

    I don’t understand “collecting”

    Don’t get me wrong, there are a few categories of things I have a lot of, like film cameras, but that’s because I started with cheaper ones, and kept getting better ones as I became more sure that film photography was a thing I wanted to do.

    But, for instance, I have friends who collect MLB bobbleheads just for the sake of collecting, and I’ll never understand that.

    • @flooppoolf@lemmy.world
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      111 year ago

      An ex had a collection of anime figures that cost him around 15,000 usd in total. Actual worth?

      I’ll give you three fiddy.

  • @FederatedSaint@lemmy.world
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    161 year ago

    My wife and I collect souvenir lapel pins from places we travel to. We write the date on the back, and keep them in a shadow box on the wall in chronological order.

    It’s nice as it’s not very expensive to buy them, and they don’t take up a lot of space to keep, and we have a nice little history of our travels at a glance.

  • @brygphilomena@lemmy.world
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    131 year ago

    Vinyl records. I like to own copies of music I like. It’s much more satisfying to go through and find something to listen to.

    Bottle openers from breweries I go to. Fairly small and they have by the bar. I don’t drink as much beer as I used to so that’s slowing down.

    • @anti@lemm.ee
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      21 year ago

      Record collector here too. I can tell you exactly when I started, and it was when I saw a copy of Beggar’s Banquet by the Rolling Stones for 50p in a charity shop. Didn’t even have a record player at the time. Now I’ve got 471 records and counting and spend far too much money on the hobby.

  • @NABDad@lemmy.world
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    121 year ago

    “Ooo… This is neat. I want it.”

    “Ooo… That one is neat too. I want it.”

    Bam! Now you’re a collector.

  • Nonagon ∞ Orc
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    1 year ago

    Carnaval Emblems! In the province of Noord-Brabant, Netherlands it is customary to decorate your carnaval coat or “boerenkiel” (farmer’s coat?) with emblems from carnaval events or clubs.

    I started because I completely fell in love with carnaval! Below is an example of such a traditional “boerenkiel”. This is what such a traditional "boerenkiel" looks like.

    • @MacedWindow@lemmy.worldOP
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      41 year ago

      I’ve never seen these before! Thanks for showing a pic. I always like collections that show off artwork/creative design.

  • @RAM@discuss.tchncs.de
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    111 year ago

    I like to collect mugs - nothing better than drinking your morning coffee from a crazy mug :))

    I collect mugs with my boyfriend (and the rest of my collective) and it is such a nice hobby. I can almost always guess who brought the mug into the house, based on people’s interest.

    Yesterday I drank coffe from a Friday the 13th Mug and I know one of my collectivists loves that series :))

    the only issue, as with all collections, it takes up so much room in the kitchen 🥲

    • @shapesandstuff@feddit.de
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      41 year ago

      I’m mostly interested in what sort of collective you mean, if it’s not too personal a question

      On topic, I don’t even collect mugs but they just… accumulate. Luckily or sadly we have a pretty small cupboard so that keeps it in check

      • @RAM@discuss.tchncs.de
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        61 year ago

        the “collective” is just me, my boyfriend and two of our friends :))

        we’ve lived together for about 7 years and plan on keeping it going. I don’t know if collective is the right word to describe our living situation but I can’t think of a better word either :)

  • Gabadabs
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    91 year ago

    Nintendo 64 games.
    It was the first game console I really played much of growing up. I’d go to my dads on the weekends and he had it there, so it was this magical time, playing Ocarina of Time and Mario Kart 64. I’ve collected nearly all the games I grew up with, as well as some I never played as a kid. I like having it, knowing that at any time I can play them, in their original forms on hardware. Emulation is great but playing on hardware just hits different.

    • @MacedWindow@lemmy.worldOP
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      11 year ago

      Do you have them displayed? I collect retro games as well and I’ve always been frustrated with the lack of spine labels on N64 games. It makes it harder to quickly find a game on the shelf. The system has some absolute bangers though.

      • Gabadabs
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        21 year ago

        I really don’t have a place or space to display them, so they sit in a bin on a small shelf w/ my other retro game stuff. I’ve never minded the lack of spine labels since I’ve always had them in bins, haha. There’s even some hidden gems on the platform!

  • @Shelbyeileen@lemmy.world
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    81 year ago

    As a kid, we were so poor, it was scary. I remember living in a car, having to choose between going hungry or eating food that was past its prime, and learning Santa wasn’t real too young (I couldn’t understand why my friends got expensive dream gifts… I thought I had been good)

    After going through all that and my mom overdosing, I started collecting things that would accumulate value or were an investment. Comic books and figurines are my go to, but I’ve also got machines for creating cosplays (as that’s my career now). I won’t buy anything that I can’t pawn off in an emergency to survive, or use it to make money. I really should have been collecting coins/gold/silver, but I picked what was fun.

    Also, shoutout to my elementary school’s lunch lady, who noticed a tiny, thin girl using the free lunch program, and offered her seconds, after everyone else had been served. I don’t think she knows how much she touched my life.

  • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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    71 year ago

    I collect ttrpgs! I love reading how mechanics work together and I’ve never found value in collecting things I don’t use, so ttrpgs it is. Plus there are some really wild ones out there that are fun to look at. It started with 3.5/Pathfinder but eventually I branched out to a couple other games that I like to play. I spend the most effort on my Car Wars collection, think I’m going to try getting a complete set of ADQ on that front next.

    My single prized book so far though is a copy of HōL’s supplement buttery wholesomeness. Specifically the second printing of it with the cover that’s written like BUTTery HOLsomeness which ended up being so hard to track down over like 5 years that I started to question if it even had a physical printing or if it was just in PDF form. Finally found the thing though last year

    • @MacedWindow@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Always love the feeling of finally tracking down a grail :^)

      Any scifi ttrpg books you’d recommend from your collection? I always love reading those.

      • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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        31 year ago

        Depends what you’re in the mood for:

        • I personally love Paranoia. It is very much a comedy game but it can be played with a serious take with the right work. Plus it is just a fun read even if you don’t play it.
        • Rifts is pretty baller conceptually but I don’t have first hand experience playing it.
        • GURPS has a Car Wars crossover making it objectively one of the best games, can be played with any level of tech, and has buckets of supplements.
        • The Burning Wheel is more fantasy but the book is basically a philosophy of play which could be adapted to lots of things, and the same author wrote Burning Empires which is more scifi but I haven’t acquired that one so can’t give first hand info on it either.
        • Can’t forget Car Wars. It is scifi though it is a mix of ttrpg and strategy/board. If you want to drive a car off a cliff while dropping mines on a helicopter as you go by and have your robot gunner leaning out the window shooting lasers at a tank it is the way to go.
        • Finally I’ll pitch HōL because the game is just so unhinged. It is all hand written and scanned, it’s edgy and crass, and is a great parody of roleplaying games. It’s engaging and fun to read with great art but realistically quite difficult to functionally play because the rules are intentionally a mess. The Buttery Wholesomeness supplement added character creation rules which don’t exist in the base game because it is a mess.
          • Ms. ArmoredThirteen
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            21 year ago

            I’m rather proud of it. Resolution isn’t great but here we go:

            Main roleplaying shelf:

            Board games and box sets:

            I’ve also got all 3 books for Monsters of Murka, limited covers, signed by several of the people who worked on it. I think my copies of Thirsty Sword Lesbians and Mork Borg are on other shelves. Finally, an unopened box set for Boat Wars which I’ll be opening sometime soon so I can pretend I lived in the 80s and just came home with a box from the lgs.