Friday, 27 August 2021

Series Speculation

I bought a thing

Actually six things.

I wonder if collectors all have a particular kryptonite?  One of mine is that I can’t pass up a special series.

This is slightly odd, as with the main bulk of my collection, the brushables, I’m not a completionist at all.  Which is not to say that I don’t have complete sets (I have several) but in instances where I decide that I only want 5 of the 6 ponies offered, I have no problem with passing up the 6th pony and considering that set complete for me.

Sorry, Tassles

It gets different when we get into special sets.  Suddenly it’s like I’m chasing Pokemon and no, I don’t want just one, I want to catch them all!  Slap an anniversary sticker on it, or make a convenient collection of all the main characters, and I am on that like a sweet tooth on discounted high end ice cream (this also applies to me). 

Funnily enough, with the original 6 Basic Fun ponies, I had intended to only get Snuzzle and Cotton Candy.  My cousin happened to get me the other four ponies for Christmas that year.  Clearly the universe intended me to have all six.  At least I managed to keep the Rainbow ponies down to only my three favourites (Windy, Moonstone, and Skydancer).

There is an element of sense in this.  The set still has to appeal to me.  I won't pick up a special set just for the sake of having it.  There is still an aspect of curation here, even if it's slightly overshadowed by a bit of mania.

I don't see a change in my mentality happening here any time soon, and that's not a problem until I run out of space. As that hasn't hapened yet (I'm surprised too), I'm not overly concerned.  It gives me another fun aspect of the collection to ponder and go on about.

Elf

Friday, 13 August 2021

The Next Generatiion

We’re in an interesting moment in our collectors’ home here. Roomy’s MOTU fandom is on an uptick, with the recent She-Ra reboot, the new He-Man continuation, and all the associated toys (note to Mattel: needs more POP).

On the other hand, I look at the new G5 toys and I just…no. I think the animation looks great, I’m looking forward to watching the movie, and if kids like the toys that’s fantastic, but the toys are doing nothing for me.  It’s the heads. Those faces (eyebrows?!?) make me think of them as people in horse costumes, and I’ve never been the biggest fan of the times when MLP veered more toward doll than pony.

Still my favourite generation

This is not a bad thing.  On the one hand, I don’t have to figure out how to fit another Generation into the Geek Cave (yet).  On the other, it’s not such a bad thing for only one of us to have a major influx of new toys at a time, especially when our display spaces are being adjusted and can’t actually display new items yet. The family room is starting to look a bit like the backroom of a toy store, with all the unopened figures in there, but it’s a temporary state.  Who’d have thought that finding an appropriately-sized cabinet for the space would turn out to be so difficult? If only Grayskull fit on a Billy bookcase.

In the autumn we'll get back to organizing things.  There's months of winter to spend with our collections coming up.  Something to look forward to.

Elf

Friday, 30 July 2021

The Summer Without Ponies

I am still here. I did not intend to take a blogging break but somehow weeks kept going by and every Friday I would think “I haven’t written a blog for the weekend.”  And then continue not to do so.

Part of the problem is, things with the collection have not been moving much these last few months. Let’s recap, shall we? Geek Cave – still a mess. New shelving for MOTU – still looking. Camera – still broken. Also, as an avid gardener and a person who hates winter, a lot of my free time has been spent outside in the garden.  Plants wait for no one.

All of this makes it hard to get motivated to talk about the collection, or customs, but I could at least post a shelfie on Instagram occasionally.

None of this should be taken as an indication that I’m losing interest in my collection.  Far from it (there have been purchases this summer, but they’re not here yet). It’s ok to take a “break” from time to time, however.  When the weather sadly gets cooler and the garden goes to bed, I’ll be ready to turn my attention back to finding the floor in the Geek Cave.  In the meantime…

Elf

Friday, 28 May 2021

Housekeeping

 Traditionally at this time of year I’d be in the thick of con prep.  That’s not happening again this year, and if you think I’m using the time to do some other things with my collection, you’d be mistaken.

We’re in an interesting flux state with our collections just now.  The plan is still on to move Marie’s MOTU/POP collection down to the TV room in the basement (geeky name pending), leaving me in sole possession of the Geek Cave.  However, we still need display cabinets before this can happen.  While some of these will be the collector’s friend, the Billy Bookshelf, we haven’t found a large cabinet to house Greyskull yet.

Naturally, the lack of cabinets means that things aren’t moving much in the Cave…except where they’re not supposed to be.

There appears to have been a struggle.

Well, the Velcro strips holding the shelves on the wall seemed like a good idea. Actually, I suspect these might have continued to work if we hadn’t just had several weeks of extreme weather fluxes.  Going from heat and humidity to cold and dry rapidly and continually may have just been too much for the adhesive.  Never mind, I have a poster that can go on that wall.

Cleaning up the tiny ponies was a bit of pain though.  Naturally, some of them fell behind the shelves.  They also bounce well, and made some good distance.  I haven’t actually checked to see if I’ve got everyone yet, and probably won’t until I figure out what to do with these little cube shelves now.  Time to get creative.

Speaking of which, you’ll have noticed that it’s been ages since I posted any custom ponies.  There’s two reasons for this.  First, I haven’t been doing a lot of art since the pandemic started.  I’ve been too lazy and tired some days, and I’ve been spending quite a lot of time working in the garden as well (a different kind of art).  Second, the photos I have of finished customs are currently trapped on my memory card because my camera has broken down, specifically, the little door to access the memory card and batteries is broken and preventing the camera from realizing that it has either.  Since we’ve been in lockdown for the past several months, I’ve not been able to take it into a store to get looked at.  All in good time.

So that’s what’s been happening (or not) here in the last little while.

Elf

Friday, 7 May 2021

Time to reflect

 You know I’m big on curating a collection.  It’s half the fun, in my opinion.  For the most part, I do this on the front end, meaning that if I’m not very sure that I want to add a piece to my collection, I simply don’t buy that piece.  This doesn’t mean that I never look at the existing collection through a critical lens though.

One time I do this is when a part of the collection ends.  G4 slid slowly into G4.5 but Hasbro recently announced the start of G5, effectively ending the G4 toy line.  It’s a perfect time to go over the G4 portion of my collection and see if there’s anything I’ve changed my mind about keeping.  This includes the many (many) unopened packages I still haven’t gotten around to adding to the display yet.  

I did the same thing at the end of G3, sitting down and going over the whole generation one pony at a time to see if there were any I no longer wanted.  I try very much to focus on each individual pony when I do this.  With G3 I looked at individual ponies, but I was also influenced by the number of figures I had and the space I had to display them.  The display was crowded and I felt that I probably didn’t need as many ponies as I had.  This resulted in my selling off quite a few ponies that I later added back into the collection when I found the pony second hand.  It turned out that I actually quite strongly liked that individual pony, and, as collectors do, I found the room I needed to display everyone.

I’ve also done it after adding ponies unexpectedly to the collection.  Sometimes when buying second hand you end up with something that wasn’t on your want list, but also isn’t already in your collection.  The temptation can certainly be to keep the new piece because it’s new (to you), and better to do that than sell it on immediately and regret it later.  However, I’ll go back and look at that pony again several months or a year later and think about whether or not I actually want her.  More often than not, the answer is yes, but there have been times when I’ve felt instead that I’m keeping that particular figure only because it conveniently landed in my hands, not because I actually wanted it.

I find curating the vintage section of the collection easiest, possibly because I'm never in a situation where I'm standing in a store having to make a quick decision on whether or not I want a specific pony (thrifting is different than retail in this regard - thrifting requires you to know the market and make quick decisions based on perceived value while retail is just about whether you want it now).  With the current line, there's always a chance that you'll never see that particular item on the shelves again, so you need to decide if you're buying it or not (a collector also often develops a 6th sense about whether or not a current item might be hard to find later).  With the vintage ponies it can be a bit easier.  Most figures are relatively easy to come by, so you've got a relatively good chance of finding another one later on.  Collectors will learn which figures are hard to find or rare and be prepared to buy when they're ready to add that piece to the collection.

I've said before that I think curating is important in the life of a collector.  This is part of how I curate but there's no right way of doing it.  Every collector has to make their own choices about how to curate their collection.  I just hope it's enjoyable.

Elf

Friday, 23 April 2021

Why did I do this?

Even when you're really curating a collection, you might find yourself looking at part of it and asking, "remind me why I did this again."

I have a couple of areas in the Geek Cave that fall into this category.

I don't actually remember the moment when I decided I needed to have all 12 Birthflower Ponies. For the longest time I only had my own birth month.  I might possibly have gotten some of these in a large lot I bought and decided then to get them all.  I don't actually remember if this was the case, I just remember that in the summer of 2019 I was completing the collection and at the same time wondering how I got here.

I mean, they're lovely girls, but not exactly the most exciting shelf.  I keep trying to find a way to display them so their symbols (the only part of them that's different) are better displayed.  Clearly, I've not been overly successful in this.

I confuse myself over the 35th anniversary ponies. Why did I want them?  I already have these ponies, vintage, in great condition.  I'm not generally interested in doubles or in box items.  What am I doing here?  Obviously Basic Fun has hit on the correct nostalgia vibes for these girls, if someone who is neither a doubles collector nor a MIB collector is buying these and displaying them in this way.  They really don't fit the general parameters of my collection.

All I can say is that the 35th anniversary ponies make me happy in (almost) the same way that the original ponies do.  The original unicorns especially have always had a special place in my heart and I like having a second version of them (but they do take up quite a bit of space).

Don't get me wrong, I don't regret any of these purchases.  I just can't completely figure out how to account for them in my collection.  So I think about them, and I look at them, and I wonder about them.  And I enjoy having them even if I can't really understand or articulate why.  It's all part of the fun of collecting.

Elf

Friday, 9 April 2021

Seeing Double

On the topic of deciding what to include in a collection, unless you’re only collecting one-of-a-kind (OOAK) items the question of doubles will eventually come up. I’ve never been hugely interested in collecting doubles of the same character (even my Snuzzle/Peachy army doesn’t admit just any old pony – there has to be some significant difference between ponies for me to keep both).  This decision was made partly as a concession to space, or the lack thereof, that doubles take up. I have enough ponies with individual characters to fill the Geek Cave, never mind adding 300 Peachys. There are many collectors who collect armies of the same pony (by which I mean same version of the same character) and they can be really cool collection pieces, but it’s not something that works for me.

Naturally, for every rule there’s an exception. When I started collecting Nirvana versions of Peachy and Snuzzle, I thought I’d focus on the ponies that looked significantly different from the original Hasbro versions.  That hasn’t actually been the case so far, although I still want to add more of these different versions to the herd.  But the majority of my army are the Nirvana versions that look pretty much like the Hasbro versions.  The thing is though, they do have their differences.  The eyes, the hair, the way the symbol is placed, these subtle differences make collecting these different versions interesting.

Back row: Lily Ledy Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Greece, 2 Italy;
Front row: Factory Sample, Flat Foot, 2 Concave Foots, 2 Macaus.

The Nirvana ponies are also an exception in that I view them very much as different characters from the Hasbro originals.  With G2-4, Hasbro started to rerelease characters much more frequently than they’d done in G1.  If I didn’t need both the short and curly haired versions of Bow Tie in my collection, then I certainly didn’t need 300 Pinkie Pies in different poses.  I made two exceptions in G3 – Cheerilee and Cherry Blossom and Minty and Christmas Minty.  In both cases the design was different enough that I was able to look at them as separate characters.

G4 might be considered the generation of the rerelease.  That was fine for awhile, I only needed one of each Mane 6 character.  Then Twilight Sparkle became a princess.  OK, I’ll keep an original and a princess version, no problem.  Except they’ve put out about 10 different versions of Princess Twilight and I like them all and how do I choose which one to keep?  This is when Roomy suggested I could consider keeping more than one version and the G4 Princess army was born (because once the dam was breached, there were several versions of Celestia, Cadence, and a few of Luna that I also really liked).

The dam was indeed breached.  I have the original Mane 6 figures.  But these pearlized versions would look great on the Crystal Empire part of the display.  And obviously I’ll need the sea pony versions for the Seaquestria display.  And I really like this particular version of Pinkie Pie…the list goes on.  And, as usual, the way I looked at a later generation changed how I looked at my G1s as well.  I’m not quite at the point of needing that second version of Bow Tie, but I have made room for a couple of doubles under specific circumstances.  BBE Tiddley Winks came from an old friend when I bought her childhood ponies.  I already had NBBE Tiddley Winks, but the BBE version was so nice, and I had her nursery playset now, I felt I just had to keep her and I’ll have a set of twins (I need to come up with a second name though).

I chose to have the same version of Spike that I'd had as a child, but when the MO and Lavender Castle versions arrived, they stayed.

Am I more open to collecting doubles now that my want list is getting a little smaller, with mainly more expensive items on it?  Probably.  I know many collectors who are now looking for both Hong Kong and China versions of common ponies.  I’m not there (yet) but who knows what will happen.

Elf