Tag Archives: Hub Comics

Photoshoot #19

At the DFW G.I. Joe and Action Figure Show in late June I bumped into Derryl DePriest, toy collector, book author, and former Hasbro VP. I joked that he should drive north to finally see my store many, many hours from where he lives. Turns out he was heading my way two months hence!

Fast forward to September. This would be a nice friend meet-up. We’d get lunch. DePriest asked if he could bring anything from his collection to show me. He was swinging through RI and MA to meet up with some friends, former co-workers, and collectors, and was bringing a big bit of treasure with him, Carl Cederholm’s original wax sculpt for the 1975 Eagle Eye GI Joe action figure — a massive 4-up! Did DePriest have anything I needed to see for my book? This is a tough question that kind collector friends sometimes ask, but I don’t always know what a friend owns, nor what my book needs. Sometimes it’s clear — a whole paragraph in my book describes one toy, so that suggests a photo of that toy (or a scan of some development art for that toy, or its original packaging). Other times a whole page of my book broadly sweeps across an era of G.I. Joe, so any number of images would work there. DePriest sent a photo of (part of) his collection, and I saw a few things that definitely want to be in Chapter 16. And I thought of something he could bring for Chapter 1. Now I was asking him to bring three additional items: two paintmasters for some ’90s Joe figures and a production ’75 figure. (“Production” means regular, like a common toy anyone could buy at a store. I don’t own anything from the ’70s.)

And now this was no longer a store “tour” and lunch, but a photoshoot for my book!

In years past, I mostly drove an hour to Rhode Island and worked with a photographer in a big room. We’d audition background colors and textures, sometimes for an action figure just standing there — a product shot — and other times with some diorama “action.” Both meant shaping the light, looking out for glare, picking big sheets of color paper or casting about for glass tiles, rubber drink coasters, place mats, stacks of postcards or anything that could look interesting around, behind, or under a G.I. Joe action figure. These have tended to be fun but stressful affairs. Last November I called in a favor with a photographer who works much closer. We were only shooting one object at a time, and with just a color behind each, no exciting poses, nothing reflective. It was faster and easier.

If DePriest would only be visiting me for three or so hours, there wasn’t time to also lug his stuff to someone’s studio, or the school near me with a big, empty room. And I wouldn’t want to hire a photographer to meet us at my store to shoot his stuff — too complicated, too many things could go wrong. This time photos would be taken at my store, and I’d be doing it myself. Unlike the full photoshoots of the past, this would so short there would be no time to worry.

My wife owns one of those lightbox cubes for taking product photos. She’s interested in anthropology and childhood development, and for a class she took she did use this cube to shoot a ceramic figure of Chang and Eng Bunker, the original Siamese Twins. (They’re Siamese because they were born in Siam, the modern term is “conjoined twins,” Lisa Simpson tells me.) My wife showed me how to set up the cube the day before — easy! On the 4th DePriest was meeting someone else for breakfast, and would get to my shop around 11am. I was there early, clearing part of the counter and setting up the cube. Hub Comics opens at noon, so we had a short window — give DePriest a tour of the store, then use my smartphone to photograph the four items he brought. The lightbox came with six color backgrounds, so I couldn’t overthink that. If I wanted green, there was just the one green.

My Thursday employee takes the train, and there were big delays, so he texted to say he’d be a little late. No big deal as I was already there.

Instead of taking dozens of variations, rotating a toy one degree to the right, swapping in a different color cyc, moving the lights for a different effect, bracketing shots for a range of exposures — all things I and my past photographers had done — I just snapped two shots of each thing with my phone* and moved on. I sure wanted to finish by noon! We don’t expect a stampede of customers at opening time. In fact, we might not see anyone at all for 5 or 10 minutes on a Thursday, but I wanted to be able to focus on one task. Part of even a simple, fast photoshoot is having some mental space in the event that something goes wrong — what if this fragile prototype of DePriest’s won’t stand upright? I didn’t bring any wax to stick to its foot. Or for manning the store — what if a walk-in needs a refund on a purchase and our Square reader is being finicky? Any minute I spent with a customer was time I wasn’t working my camera or talking with DePriest. Splitting my focus, or my potential focus, between these two jobs wasn’t ideal. Fortunately, only a few customers stopped in, and they didn’t need much attention or had straightforward transactions, no looking up something obscure in the catalog or scouring our shelves for a book that’s been misplaced. I finished taking photos and my Thursday employee arrived. Note to self: don’t schedule a photoshoot at the store during store hours!

I did not overthink my photos, and DePriest and I got lunch next door. He had to leave shortly, with an hour drive to his next meeting, something about Pokemon or Magic: The Gathering or rare G.I. Joe toys. Since he had gone to the trouble of bringing some one of a kind G.I. Joe stuff for me, I brought a few paintings from my collection at home to show him. It was great seeing his reaction. We said goodbye and he drove off.

After my other photoshoots, I wait a few weeks for my photographer to make a contact sheet and process all those RAW files. Not so with these pics on my phone! This was part of the trade-off. For a down-and-dirty, simple photoshoot, my phone’s optics and the lightbox’s default setting were going to have to be enough. And after a few taps on my phone, these photos were my hard drive the same day!

Photoshoot #19 was a success.

* – Keen-eyed blog readers will note that I’ve lamented the poor quality of my camera phone in recent blog posts where I write up my convention experiences and thank con-pals who contribute their own higher quality photos. I didn’t use my old phone to capture DePriest’s treasure, as I had just, finally, after nine years (yes, nine years) upgraded.

Leave a comment

Filed under Book Behind the Scenes, Photography

Anatomy of a Signing – Tom Reilly at Hub Comics

I’ve been meaning to finish and post this for two months, but holidays and other store events got in the way. But with Hub Comics and the Tom Reilly event there getting a mention in this week’s new issue of G.I. Joe (cf. the end of this post), I took that as a sign.

To jump to the exciting part: people were surprised I got Tom Reilly at my shop the week that G.I. Joe issue #1 was released. How did I do it? I asked.

Continue reading

Leave a comment

Filed under Hub Comics, Talking Joe podcast

Back Issues – G.I. Joe and Otherwise

Two similar tasks are taking up part of the month. One is sorting, bagging, boarding, and pricing a few hundred copies of G.I. Joe-related titles at Hub Comics in advance of the Tom Reilly signing on November 16th. The other is re-bagging and boarding all my comics at home, particularly my Marvel G.I. Joe-related titles, as my wife and I recently moved.

Continue reading

2 Comments

Filed under Back issues, General Musings, Hub Comics

Hub Comics Gave Away 200 Copies of “G.I. Joe” #200

Hub Comics side of case of G.I. Joe #200

Besides teaching animation and writing this book on G.I. Joe, I also own a comic book storeG.I. Joe isn’t a big seller, to my dismay.  I enjoy giving away comics on Free Comic Book Day, and to neighbor-kids from my home on Halloween.  It was just a matter of time before these two things came together, plus I wanted an excuse to order an unreasonable quantity of the special anniversary.  Say, ten times our normal order.  (And not for the variant covers, as those are a bogus business model.) Continue reading

7 Comments

Filed under Hub Comics

Apologies for lack of posts

Sorry for my absence, readers.  The end of school, several events at my comic book store, and the finishing and printing of my new comic have pulled away my attention from the blog.  I’ll start posting regularly very soon.  In the meantime, please enjoy this commission of Flint and the Incredible Hulk I drew Saturday at Boston Comic Con.

Flint and the Incredible Hulk by Tim Finn at Boston Comic Con

2 Comments

Filed under Hub Comics

Photos from Larry Hama signing at Hub Comics

Larry Hama signing G.I. Joe at Hub Comics

Photos of Larry Hama’s signing at Hub Comics in Somerville, MA, 07 April 2012, are now up here.  No log-in required.  Lots of shots of Hama sketching G.I. Joe characters.

Leave a comment

Filed under Hub Comics

Larry Hama signing at Hub Comics

Larry Hama portrait - signing at Hub Comics

Larry Hama may now be an annual fixture at the Official G.I. Joe Collector’s Convention, and has attended more and more conventions in the last few years what with G.I. Joe back in the spotlight, but did you know he’s never signed in Boston?  Hama’s visit to Hub Comics (19 Bow St.) this Saturday April 7th will be his first-ever Boston-area appearance!  (Somerville isn’t technically in Boston, but it’s 2 miles from Boston, and borders Charlestown and Cambridge, which both border Boston.)  The signing is from 11am to 4pm, and Hama will be sketching as well.  Bring your Wolverine, Generation, Batman, Marvel Premiere, Daredevil, and Mort the Dead Teenager comics to get signed!  And Hub Comics will have every in-print IDW collection for sale:

Larry Hama signing at Hub Comics G.I. Joe books graphic novels on tableMetered street parking available.  MBTA-wise on the 85 and 87 bus lines/near the 91, 86 and CT2.

Hub Comics interior

Leave a comment

Filed under Hub Comics

Hub Comics in the news

DigBoston Feb 29 2012 Tim Finn photo at Hub Comics by Jamie Meditz

Photo by Jamie Meditz

Not much touted here is the fact that I own a comic book store.  It’s a recent development, and with our renovations still ongoing (shelves, paint, lights, awning, website), it’s a little harder to blog and write.  On the plus side, our customers always have IDW’s full line of G.I. Joe comics and graphic novels to choose from.  Both myself and the store are in this week’s issue of DigBoston, a free arts and nightlife newspaper, and I manage to give some attention to Real American Hero.

DigBoston Feb 29 2012 cover Diesel Cafe photobooth photos Tim FinnDigBoston Feb 29 2012 Tim Finn Hub Comics article by Corey Estlund photo by Jamie MeditzA longer version should be online in a week.  Thanks to interviewer Corey Estlund, photographer Jamie Meditz, and art director Scott Murray for the kind coverage.

2 Comments

Filed under Back issues, Hub Comics, Reading comics