Nice to see the previews are up for Bruce's linen back posters, looks like a few regulars make the cut. I noticed this unusual poster, anyone else notice?
Good to see Danny turn up
Certainly a rare one, but I wonder about the price. Anyone?
Great art
Great art ;p
Interesting that someone would linen back this
I swear there must be a pad of these and one gets torn off and sent to auction monthly?!
I'm guessing the same artist:
Woohoo!
And can you guess the sub-genre? Personally I like it.
Remember that I can only auction what is sent to me!
Each auction starts from scratch, and the only time there are ""reruns" is when items are sent back to us from the buyer to re-auction, or the very rare times when a buyer never pays and we put it back up (and you can tell when this occurs, because the old unconsummated result is removed from our auction history).
I have always relied on the kindness of consignors. You won't see more top quality daybills until one or more consignors send them to me!
Here is a handy checklist to help tell eMoviePoster.com apart from all other major auctions!
HAS lifetime guarantees on every item - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS unrestored and unenhanced images - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS 100% honest condition descriptions - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS auctions where the winner is the higher of two real bidders - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS "buyers premiums" - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS "reserves or starts over $1 - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS hidden bidder IDs - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS no customer service to speak of - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS "nosebleed" shipping charges - NOT eMoviePoster.com
Actually, the answer is simpler. With multi-piece unbacked posters, you just shoot each piece individually, and they you "join" them, overlapping them in the way they do when you actually would glue them together on a wall.
This is also how we shoot ALL multi-panel posters (three-sheets, six-sheets, French and Italian two-panels, etc).
Once in a blue moon we are consigned something that is in one piece or glued together that is too large for our walls (but that is very rare, because both our poster walls are large enough for a full six-sheet).
Here is a handy checklist to help tell eMoviePoster.com apart from all other major auctions!
HAS lifetime guarantees on every item - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS unrestored and unenhanced images - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS 100% honest condition descriptions - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS auctions where the winner is the higher of two real bidders - IS eMoviePoster.com
HAS "buyers premiums" - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS "reserves or starts over $1 - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS hidden bidder IDs - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS no customer service to speak of - NOT eMoviePoster.com
HAS "nosebleed" shipping charges - NOT eMoviePoster.com
Comments
Good to see Danny turn up
Certainly a rare one, but I wonder about the price. Anyone?
Great art
Great art ;p
Interesting that someone would linen back this
I swear there must be a pad of these and one gets torn off and sent to auction monthly?!
I'm guessing the same artist:
Woohoo!
And can you guess the sub-genre? Personally I like it.
Quite like this, not as much as the 1SH from last time, but quite still...
Very cool, from 1910, other than the condition what's not to like
This is awesome too, circa1887 - how cool is that?!
From 1926, very nice, but missing some white tape.
Also very, but not as nice as the Daybill
Each auction starts from scratch, and the only time there are ""reruns" is when items are sent back to us from the buyer to re-auction, or the very rare times when a buyer never pays and we put it back up (and you can tell when this occurs, because the old unconsummated result is removed from our auction history).
I have always relied on the kindness of consignors. You won't see more top quality daybills until one or more consignors send them to me!
Here is a handy checklist to help tell eMoviePoster.com apart from all other major auctions!
Did a double take while browsing Bruce's latest auctions. That Kiss in a Taxi insert is almost identical to the daybill!
Some big numbers on the aussie one sheets for MM...
With a camera would be my guess, what was yours?
Here is a handy checklist to help tell eMoviePoster.com apart from all other major auctions!
*starts packing up posters*
2) Consignments temporarily relocated
3) King Kong laid out
4) Bruce lines up the shot
This is also how we shoot ALL multi-panel posters (three-sheets, six-sheets, French and Italian two-panels, etc).
Once in a blue moon we are consigned something that is in one piece or glued together that is too large for our walls (but that is very rare, because both our poster walls are large enough for a full six-sheet).
Here is a handy checklist to help tell eMoviePoster.com apart from all other major auctions!
Here is a handy checklist to help tell eMoviePoster.com apart from all other major auctions!