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What is the most sought after Tintin collectable?

rodney
Member
#1 · Posted: 30 Oct 2009 03:15
Hi!

I read with interest everyone's postings for price estimations on their items and 'for sale' postings.

Whilst I have a moderate collection of books, posters, figurines Tintin related I would be interested to know what is generally considered the rarest item and most sought after item.
I anticipate it's probably:
Rare signed work of Herge
Herge personal letter to fan
English Casterman editions (think from 50's/60's?)
Complete 1st editions of French/English Tintin all signed by Herge
Password for unlimited access to Herge's archives

Am I on the right track (apart from the last one) or is there some item which is held in such high esteem than others?

Cheers,

Rod
jock123
Moderator
#2 · Posted: 1 Nov 2009 15:00
There really isn’t a way to measure this, that I can see. How would you decide? The original painting used as artwork for the cover of America holds the highest recorded price for the sale of a piece of cartoon artwork anywhere in the world, but is that important to you if you are seeking to complete your collection of Tintin-themed biscuit tins or chocolate wrappers?

Any piece of artwork by Hergé would be unique, so desirable - but do you count a picture of Tintin to be more sought after - and thus “rarer” than, say, a picture of Mrs. Finch? By all estimates there must be more images of Tintin than Mrs. Finch by Hergé by some considerable marging, but I’d guess that the more “common” Tintin would be more wanted. But what if it was a never-before seen by the public image of Mrs. Finch, on a page which wasn’t published, which showed a piece of story not known about - would that be a rarity of greater standing, even if it didn’t show Tintin? It would be up to the individual.

I wouldn’t knock back a set of signed French first editions if someone wanted to give them to me, but I wouldn’t go out of my way to buy them, even if I had the money. I’d be happy to own even one of Hergé’s pieces of commercial art that he did for advertisements over a signed first edition.

Hergé seems to have been an inveterate letter writer (the largest part of the archives is the correspondence - more than 50,000 items), so again while many, if not all, will be unique (I imagine he may have had a standard or form letter for replies to fans), they may not be scarce. Whether people who have them tend to sell them, who could say, so they might not change hands - so there might be a lot of them, but comparatively few on the market.

You would also have to look at what constituted the rarity - some first editions had vanishingly small runs, so to find one at all, unsigned, would probably make it more collectible than a signed 714 or Picaros. But there was some discussion a while back about an edition of Tintin in Tibet in Tibetan*, which was suppressed and destroyed, of which only one copy seemed to be still in existence. It has no real connection to Hergé (he wrote it of course, but never saw this copy), but it would still be a rare book, possibly the rarest, but would many people actually want it?

* Update: I beg your pardon - it wasn’t in Tibetan, it was in Greek, and a second copy may have emerged… Rarity possibly halved at a stroke!
number1fan
Member
#3 · Posted: 2 Nov 2009 20:00
To be honest i think its what you want personally.Before 2005 i had tried years to get hold of an English colour edition of Tintin in the Congo. Im also after The English first edition of Land of the Black Gold.Im trying to get both Blue Oranges and Golden Fleece English book versions.As well as the Golden press editions of the books.

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