Showing posts with label Be Our Guest Writer. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Be Our Guest Writer. Show all posts

Thursday, August 30, 2018

Be Our Guest Writer: A Tale of a Gift...



 Redartz:  Hello, all! Today we have the benefit once again of storytime, courtesy of our friend Humanbelly! Take it away, HB...



HB:  Good morning, friends!   Although the ComicBookRoom hasn't even had time to collect dust yet, and only just recently got Japanese lantern paper shades on the bare light bulbs, already there's a new centerpiece donation/acquisition that's been added to the permanent display.  Our resident most-talented-guy-we-know. . . PFG(avigan). . . quietly surprised me with this original work he came up with, featuring that Lime freeze-pop (freeze-cicle?) side-kick character that began appearing in the illustrated pieces he'd post every now and again in our on-going Bronze Age communities, here.  --- The usually-mute little green guy with the suspicious moniker:  "Li'l HB". . .  

Using PFG's own words, the piece is a bit of a tribute to   "the sense of respect that all of the contributors and posters had at both Bronze Age Babies and Back in the Bronze Age.  Even when we disagree with each other about who we most appreciated << under the right circumstance I was a fan of both Robbins and Heck >> we always agreed with each others right to appreciate what we did."

Could not agree more, sir-- well-said.   Here is the "page" file itself:




To call me Tickled would be the height of hyperbolic understatement.
Early the next morning, I sent the file off to FedExOffice, and had a lengthy email thread with the tech on getting size, dimensions, etc worked out-- and was finally able to have them print it up on a nice heavy paper stock.
Then off to the scene shop (which has been laying messy and fallow over the summer) to mount it, cover it, and possibly cobble together a frame.   And. . . discovered that an old thrift-store frame abandoned by my scenic artist a couple of years ago was EXACTLY the right size.  So. . . I surreptitiously removed her (forgotten) project, and gave PFG's masterpiece a much better setting than I could have provided on my own.




How was I feeling about all this?




This was the look on my face as I worked-- alone-- pretty much the entire time.  When I was finished, I sat there in the shop, admiring the whole thing, and laughed for 15 minutes.   Then brought it home and hung it next to the still-expanding Hulk Exhibit.




And PFG, I would be remiss if I didn't pass on how wonderfully impressed and appreciative my wife was with your piece, here.   "This is such an honor-- !  It's so good, and he gave it to YOU!  This is wonderful!"   My wife is not one to be tremendously open with enthusiasm or praise, believe me.   There is no doubt that this is her favorite artifact in the entire ComicBookRoom at this point. . .  I thank you once again!

And that concludes today's hi-light report---!

HB

Redartz: Thanks, HB; great story and a truly fine gift. And thanks as well to PFG for sharing your art with us, and your thoughts as well.

Saturday, July 28, 2018

Be Our Guest Writer: Welcome to My Space ( no,not Myspace)...



Redartz:  Hello, Bronze Age Alumni! We have a treat today, a guest post from our esteemed friend Humanbelly, or HB as we know him. I've been considering a discussion of how we might set up our ideal comic / treasure room for protection and enjoyment; HB beat me to it! His narrative begins below; in Hulk-green type, of course. Many thanks, and a tip of the BitBA cap to you for your contribution; and now, take it away HB!



HB:  Too Much Exposition Dept:    So Teammates. . . Our basement does indeed have a Comic Book Room.   It is exists as eternal proof that I am married to the Best Wife In The World.  When we were house-hunting in the spring of 2000, we came across this place's open-house about an hour after an owner backed-out of the deal to sell us her house in the same neighborhood, leaving our spirits crushed.  Then we happened across this home, which proved to be SO much better and suited to our needs-- though more expensive.   When we got to the mostly-unfinished basement, there was this one finished room that had been claimed as a bedroom by the previous owners' rather difficult teenage son.  And out of nowhere ('cause the idea truly had never occurred to me) HBWife simply said, "This could be your comic book room. . . "

There was a brief out-of-body experience where the astral forms of Dr Strange and Professor X and Deadman clapped me on the back and gave me the high-sign, and then I returned to the mortal plane and muttered a calculatedly none-too-eager, "Well, sure-- that would be kind of nice, actually.  If you don't think we need it for anything more important. . . "--  and that's how we got a Comic Book Room!

Two things developed over the intervening years, though--

1) It very easily turned into a clutter-filled catch-all room-- especially for things like musical instruments and band equip't.  It also was my primary Christmas headquarters, and would get further trashed with every holiday season frenzy.   Keeping it in order always fell low on the ol' priority list.

2)  HUGE development:  It's a basement.  The room already had a musty carpet, which I then covered over with the salvaged carpet from our own old dining room (previous house).  And I never once thought about getting a de-humidifier.  So there's been about 18 years' worth of slowly accumulating dust/mold/mildew at work down there.  The air has been unpleasant for quite sometime, and last year I finally noticed that EVERYTHING had a thin surface film of dust-like mold on it.   Mind you, not the comics themselves, as they're all safely boxed, but the tons of accumulated "stuff" needed to be cleaned-- and in a few cases, pitched.   Beatles posters and some Z-grade cheap Marvel posters were done, period.

And so, that was this summer's early main project.  Clear EVERYTHING out. Get a de-humidifier running non-stop.  Wipe down/dis-infect/ clean every surface and every object.  I pulled up and threw out all of the carpet, and laid VCT tile (troweled adhesive, not self-stick).   Many beloved posters were salvaged, but had a bit of staining, so those were mounted on backing boards, covered w/ salvaged plexiglass (from my scene shop), and I fitted them with quick plain frames.  Then went about re-designing the room configuration into something more welcoming AND more practical.   There are a number of finishing touches to attend to-- but it's already MUCH more the Comic Book Room I'd imagined it to be, lo, those 18 happy years ago--!



Open the door, and there's a peek!   Lighting at the moment is cheap LED bulbs in the ceiling fixtures, so it does lend a bit of a harsh, institutional tone to the photos.  Better fixtures and shades anticipated.  



Looking at the west wall & telephone corner.   SO many old cartoon paperbacks, MAD pocket books, Andre Norton Sci-Fi from my youth; beloved old collection sets; Books about comics, etc, etc, on the shelves.



South wall. The couch was a LONG time ago used furniture purchase.  It contains a fold-out bed that should be banned by the Geneva Convention as a potential crime against humanity.   My youngest sister-in-law was a huge trouper for a few years, and would try to use it as an auxiliary 2nd guest room, and ultimately just slept on the couch itself (which is amazingly comfortable, tbh).  The black trunk-table has a wild anecdote or two attached involving me and HBSon and a Boston commuter rail train. . .    Note the Marvel 25th Anniversary poster from 1986----

 

Southeast "Hulk" corner (some call it The Shrine, but c'mon-- let's not go overboard. . . )  When first getting the room put together, I did have a bit of an ebay-frenzy looking for cool items to fill it up.  The Hulk Doritos stand-up was a particularly happy find.   But this corner is dominated by sentimental attachment far more than anything like collectibility.  Probably 85% of the Hulk toys and trinkets and "stuff" were given to me throughout my life by friends and family and even just acquaintances who knew how fond I was of the character.   And so they continue to have a place of priority in my heart. . . and in this little museum.   ALSO--  it's great how mounting almost anything under plexiglass and putting it in a frame lends it a sense of gravity and legitimacy--  makes it "important"--!   That shredded piece of purple fabric, framed near the ceiling?   It's my first Hulk t-shirt.  An iron-on transfer my Mom got me from a clothing outlet when I was in 7th grade.   I wore it to DEATH.  Outgrew it, and STILL wore it.   It's perpetually ended up in the rags-box or in the bottom of trunks and boxes. . .and I could never quiiiiite throw it away.  And am now delighted to give it a final position of prominence until it finally does get tossed out by those who proceed me in this mortal plane.   (I've been reading up on some Shakespeare-- preparing for a couple of auditions. . . )



And the north wall, where the storage shelves migrated to.   There are between 30 and 31 long-boxes there (some shorts mixed in)-- my entire personal collection, as well as a small chunk of HBGirl's personal childhood acquisitions that I'm holding onto for her.   And then a flippin' treasure trove of personal memories ranging from my own childhood (the GI Joe "SuperTeam" that I created at one point-- note the capes!) to my kids' (the 30 or so  enthusiastically-used Toy Biz 10" Marvel figures populating that center shelf, and the bound volumes of BLOOM COUNTY that HBGirl adores--), to the lunch-boxes that EVERYONE used at one point or another-- even a begrudging HBWife-- heh--.


And my thought to exit with--  While there are a number of treasures tucked into corners and spots of the room that you don't see here (FOOM poster; framed Avengers poster from the Bomber Jacket era; lots of doodads on the upper shelves, etc),    I've gotten to a happy point in my life where I recognize that the value of all of these trinkets and this stuff is definitely not monetary ('cause, heh, it's not worth a lot o' $$, despite the volume---), but in the fact that it brings me a unique joy--  a zillion little bits of association with happy memories and friends and family.   Items that catch the fancy, and bring a smile.  And other things that represent the thrill of the hunt that comes with being any kind of hobbyist/collector.    It's a cocoon of perpetual nostalgia that continues to move in tandem with the passage of time.   

And now it's mold-free--- whew!!

HB


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