Hasbro brings out another wave of action figures for the eleventh wave of The Vintage Collection. This wave is the second for the new year, and it's made up 5 characters from the deleted scenes from "Return of the Jedi", now added to the recent Blu-ray editions. Follow the sneak peeks on the official Rebelscum.com Facebook page tonight I head back into the studio to shoot these figures for the Photo Archive.
bron: http://www.rebelscum.com
Grappig voor de collectors onder ons !
Ja dat wel maar vind ze wel cool 🙂 uit deleted scenes figures maken !
Cool zeker 🙂
Ja deze figures vallen zeker onder de zware collectors items !
Dies is best Fett 😛
Over mooie collectables gesproken, ik heb deze:
Gemaakt en gesigneerd door Dave Dorman (dit is zo'n gelimiteerde reprint, of hoe dat ook heet). Zijn er niet veel van gemaakt, en.. hij is gesigneerd door Jeremy Bulloch himself 😀 Ben ik speciaal voor naar Gent geweest 😛
Gaaf! 🙂
Ik vind het allemaal zo gaaf, maar als verzamelaar is het niet bij te houden om alle poppetjes te kopen die uitkomen. Ik kan me voorstellen dat er wel verzamelaars zijn die dat doen, maar ten koste van wat?
Neemt niet weg, dat die vintage kaarten wel mooi blijven
Top 5 most valuable action figures:
1. "Telescoping Lightsaber" Darth Vader, 1978
When the first wave of Star Wars "Early Bird" action figure sets began arriving on the market in 1978, the original Darth Vader, Obi-Wan Kenobi and Luke Skywalker figures came with a telescoping lightsaber accessory. The small plastic weapon of the Jedi Knight would rise out from the hollow arm of each figure, then a thinner piece would further rise out. This proved difficult to manufacture and broke easily, so it was abandoned in the next wave of figures to reach stores, replacing the telescoping lightsaber with a single-piece version. It's been said that only a few hundred versions of these figures were ever made and the Darth Vader version of this figure is the most highly prized.
Average Market Value: $6,000
2. Vinyl Cape Jawa, 1978
When the original Jawa action figures hit store shelves, they were outfitted with a thin vinyl cape similar to the capes found on Darth Vader and Obi-Wan Kenobi. However, with the second wave of Jawa figures, the vinyl cape was replaced with a sewn cloth robe and stayed that way from then on. The story goes that Kenner felt that buyers would feel cheated because the figure was half the size of any other figure, yet still selling for the same price. Their solution was to add the cloth robe in order to help the buyers feel they were getting their money's worth.
Average Market Value: $2,000
3. Rocket Firing Boba Fett, 1980
Star Wars collectors have been debating this figure's very existence for decades. The story goes that in 1980, Kenner released the first wave of Empire Strikes Back action figures, which included the original Boba Fett figure that came with a missile that fired from his back. Later, Kenner worried about the safety of the tiny projectile and re-released the figure with the missile permanently glued into the figure's backpack. Kenner officially denies that they ever released a missile-firing version of the figure, but a few have surfaced in auctions and in the collectible market, and many collectors have paid hefty sums for one.
Average Market Value: $1,000 - $2,000
4. Yak Face, 1985
1985 saw the official cancellation of Kenner's Star Wars action figure line. When the line was given the ax, there was one last figure, Yak Face, that had gone through production but was never distributed to toy stores. In order to recoup some of their production loses, Kenner, instead of destroying the overstock, chose to simply send the figures to outlets in Europe and Canada, thus poor Yak Face never saw retail in the States. Years later, as the Star Wars collectible market continued to grow, Yak Face action figures began to make their way into collectors hands. But the figure remains extremely rare, fueling rumors that Kenner did indeed destroy most of the overstock figures back in 1985.
Average Market Value: $1,000
5. Blue Snaggletooth, 1978
Another figure featured in the Early Bird sets released in 1978 was Snaggletooth. The story goes that when the Kenner toy designers were making the prototype figures, the only visual resource they had for the character Snaggletooth was a grainy, black-and-white photograph of the character's head. With so little to go on, the Kenner employees did their best and just made up the rest, making a figure of a blue suited, average human height creature from a character that actually wore red and was about 3 feet tall. The figure was quickly scrapped and never seen again, making it possibly the rarest Star Wars action figure on the market.
Average Market Value: $400
Grappig die Top 5 most valuable action figures:
1. "Telescoping Lightsaber" Darth Vader, 1978
Deze actiefiguurtje heb ik dus! Met telescope lichtzwaard intact!
... pardon?! 6000 waard? hmm nu begin ik te twijfelen, ga ik zo toch even checken.