Showing posts with label e-fanzine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label e-fanzine. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

2011: The Gentleman Hat Year

I now pronounce the year 2011 as the Gentleman Hat year.

The Gentleman Hat year is a year where one must wear a gentleman hat at least once a week for a day. The inspiration to the notion of the gentleman hat year is Professor Layton's phrase: "A true gentleman never removes his hat." Please be aware there are circumstances where a hat must be removed.

A gentleman hat is a hat that looks like that of a gentleman's. Feel free to dub any hat as a gentleman hat.


Note: I have never played a Professor Layton game or watched any Professor Layton animation before. I only know it through Professor Layton fans. Oh ho ho ho ho ho ho!

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Manga Farming

Manga FarmingI was surfing the net and stumbled upon manga farming. I was amazed!

Koshi Kawachi, an artist from Japan, used the pages of old magazines and manga to grow plants with. He has a gallery of photographs on his website with pictures of the plants sprouting from manga.

Watering MangaIt seems manga farmning requires the pages to stay moist as it's in the way of sunlight. I wonder if I should try it with the extra Shonen Jump magazine I have. I'm not sure if it's wise to grow edible vegetables with manga though. Would the ink from the pages cause the vegetable to taste funny? It may even be toxic! I guess if I want to try this manga farming I should try growing daisies.

Source: http://www.koshikawachi.com

Monday, November 29, 2010

Selling your Used English Manga

You're cleaning your room and you find manga that had been lying around for some time. You haven't touched that manga after who knows when and you know that if you keep it it'll just continue sitting somewhere catching dust. A thought comes across your mind: "what if I could sell the manga and other anime-related stuff I have but don't need or want anymore?"

That's a great idea, but if you're living in a metropolis like the Greater Toronto Area, another 100 or more people are already doing that. In the past 4 years, I learned selling old anime and manga related treasures isn't as easy as it seems. You want to get the most out of selling your stuff, but a lot of people are looking for the lowest price possible-- unless it's a rare item that you're selling.

In this post, I will be discussing the steps to and what I've learned about selling used English manga in the Greater Toronto Area. Here is an outline of the steps I will be discussing:
  1. Finding a network
  2. Know the condition of your manga
  3. Setting a price
  4. Sell it

Step 1.

The first thing you should do is to find a network where you can advertise for used items. Examples of such networks are: shops that buy used stuff, classifieds in newspapers, eBay, personal websites, social networks, online classified communities, or community garage sales. I prefer to use online classified advertisement communities such as Craigslist and Kijiji because you just need to post an ad and set up a meeting with anyone who responds to the ad. Most of the people I've met offline were kind, but you still have to be careful about meeting someone you don't know offline.

Step 2.

The condition of your manga is very important when setting a price for it. When I buy used manga, I don't mind the spine being bent a bit on the edge, light fingerprints, and light-yellow pages, but other people may. If your manga has liquid damage to it (i.e. water or coffee) or has a ripped cover, it's better to set the selling price really low because there's a chance that someone else is selling the same manga in a better condition. Oxidation causes most manga pages to turn yellow. To avoid this, keep manga in a closed space like drawers and shelves. I like to put my manga in a dark place away from sunlight and heat because I'm afraid sunlight would cause the covers to lose colour and the pages yellow. I am not sure if sunlight is capable of turning pages yellow though.

Step 3.

This step is setting the price of your items. Please be aware that I use Canadian currency. If you want to sell your used English manga for $10 each, those books better be in new condition, wrapped in plastic, look untouched, and is expensive in stores. You'd have to be lucky or find someone desperate for manga to sell used manga at that price. Not even volumes of rare manga like the first published english-translated Sailor Moon series could be sold for $10 each in a casual manner. An omnibus manga is a compilation of volumes from a manga series. I am not familiar with the chances of selling a used one for $10, but it seems reasonable enough if the book isn't damaged. Considering that an omnibus is a package that carries more than one volume, you could even try to sell it for $12 or $15.

The standard price for used manga is $5 each. It's not guaranteed that it will be sold, but you'll have a better chance of selling it than at the price of $10. If you're selling a manga series, $5 per book would work best for series that have 1 to 8 volumes. For series with more than 6 volumes, it is better to sell them for less than $4 each. I have to admit though, you're more likely to sell a manga series at the price of $3 or less per volume.

Here is an image with suggested prices and my thoughts on the prices according to what I've learned about selling used English manga:

Suggested Used English Manga Prices per Volume
Remember: $5 is the standard price. That is where I am 75% sure that the manga will be sold. If the price is at $1 per volume, it is 99% that the book would be sold. At $12 per volume, it is 5% that the manga will be sold.

I remember trying to sell volumes 1 to 27 of Bleach for $100 ($3.70/volume) on Kijiji for half a year. I lowered the price to $60 ($2.22/volume), but I still didn't get a reply to my offer until I lowered the price to $50 ($1.85/volume). Even though the books were in new condition and I included a picture to my advertisement to prove their condition, I had to lower the price because there were other people selling more than 20 volumes of Bleach at a unit price similar to my earlier offers. I also wanted to guarantee that I will sell the series because I didn't want it lying around any longer. I think the reason why no one replied to my offer of $100 was because it was $100. The number of digits and the overall price probably seemed unpleasant to people.

As a used English manga buyer, I tend to buy smaller series because I like to avoid spending over $60 for a used manga series. I have met vendors that sold their manga where the more you buy, the less it is per unit. Vendors that do that seem to sell their manga much quicker than set prices.

Step 4.

When someone has taken an interest in your manga, lose all attachment to it. If the person asks for a lower price, sell it to them for that price (if it's reasonable). They may have found that price somewhere else and the chances of another person interested in buying may not come by if you know you're selling a series that many other people are selling. Don't expect to make a lot of money out of selling your used English manga!

Comments and opinions on this guide (if you would call it a guide) are greatly appreciated. I read through it a few times and it feels like a shared personal experience that is not at least 90% realistic.

Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Fandom Sections?

I am trying to group the fandoms. My definition of fandom groups is the category a fan is specialized or involved in. Fans may associate themselves with one or more category of fandom.

I am going to mention a few groups in the fandom, and if you've got any to add to it, please comment.

  1. Cosplay

  2. Collecting

  3. Fan art

  4. Fan fiction

  5. Music

  6. Gaming

  7. Review/Information


This would be a pretty cool topic for a fanzine.

Friday, July 17, 2009

Northern Anime Festival 2009 and FanEXPO 2009


I was planning to attend Northern Anime Festival, but I forgot... about it. I applied for summer classes, and it's easy to distract me with work when I feel my life depends on it. I'm disapointed in myself for not thinking through my own schedule and not being able to make a video about it. There's also a chance that the summer classes may interfere with my trip to fan expo. If that happens, then I'm not attending fan expo this year for sure. If I do end up attending, I'm looking forward to the cosplays this year. If you're a cosplayer and you're reading this, don't let me down!

I want to attend at least one Northern Anime Festival, so I'm planning not to take a summer course the next year.

On another note, I want to know what you think of an e-fanzine about Toronto anime conventions. It would consist mostly images, videos, and comments on cosplayers. The rest would be about the set up, management, and people who attended the convention in the view of the e-fanzine collaborators (if I can get them).

Sunday, April 26, 2009

E-fanzines

... are hard to manage. I wanted to make an e-fanzine because I thought it would be cool, so I made a schedule for it. That was when I realized it would take up a lot of the time I needed for school and living necessities, making me having no life but the life of a blogger. I have a feeling I'm a person that's uncapable of making a living out of a blog or a website, so I gave up. I'll just make random updates to pleasacure and not call it an e-fanzine.

Now I'm thinking: "hm... maybe I could make a fanzine in real life instead? Maybe print several copies of it to share with the people who collaborated in its making?" It seems like a pretty good idea when you really want to make one, but I'm not sure about how to do that. Am I suppose to get a group of people to draw, then scan those pictures, print them out with high quality ink and or paper, then get it bound as a book at some print and copy center? That would take more than 3 months with the schedule that most of the people I know have. Mm... I suppose it's worth it as long as the product's nicely done. Alright! I'll try it out... starting in June.

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Time to Hit the Other Books

My stomach hasn't been feeling well lately. It's constantly making new noises: enough noises to make a new single with. Maybe it's the awful fast food I'm eating everyday. I don't have much of a choice of avoiding the fast food joints on my school's campus though. It could be the tap water I'm always boiling and drinking.

Since I got used to the basic functions of blogspot and like it very much, I made another one. It's on the sidebar under 'Networks'. The blog is called Pleasacure. Pleasacure is the username I use for Deviant Art and You Tube, and will now be used for an online fanzine; also known as an e-fanzine. I don't know if those things exist, but if they didn't they do now.

I've finished the two assignments, but I wouldn't say I did my best to make them good. I did my best to make them pass: they're no good. I'll have to refine them after exams. After studying for my exams I'll post something on Tegaki E to celebrate.
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