Eddie Vedder 2017 merchandise

1262729313293

Comments

  • nicknyr15
    nicknyr15 Posts: 9,222
    sj9966 said:
    That same guy just had a sale complete for the 3 AP Amsterdam posters
    Scum 
  • PJ-Cubs
    PJ-Cubs Posts: 3,377
    shecky said:
    PJ-Cubs said:
    Dropping one from my cart in 1 minute

    Why was it in your cart if you didn't want it?
    Just gums up the works for people that really do want the poster and are trying hardWas.
    I've read comments from some of the artists that they hate when people do that.
    I was planning to buy it because I think the artwork is awesome and then decided against it because I was not at the show.   Sorry that I let people on the boards know that one was coming available and to keep refreshing.  Next time I will just let the bots grab it.
  • Noload
    Noload Monticello, Georgia Posts: 1,634
    hopefully keeping the store closed before sales helps a little against the bots 

    That was very fast.  Congrats BK
    www.twitter.com/robert_harbin
  • mwplum
    mwplum Posts: 1,542
    There's something chilling about this one.... :pensive:
    Three black cats(symbolic?) and Ed walking toward sundown, darkness about to take over from the left and right.
    Great effort by Dan Mumford

    Cats...or maybe foxes since it's a British theme? Love the darkness of the poster, and love that it incorporates part of London. This is definitely my favourite poster of the tour too, with Ken Taylor's second. 
    1992-07-21 Vancouver
    1993-9-4 Vancouver
    1996-9-16 Seattle
    1998-7-19 Vancouver, 7-21 Seattle, Memorial Stadium
    2000-11-6 Seattle
    2001-10-22 Seattle
    2002 -12-09 Seattle
    2009-8-17 Manchester, 9-25 Vancouver
    2011-6-16 Seattle (EV), 9-3/4 PJ20, 9-25 Vancouver
    2012-6-27 Amsterdam (#2!)
    2013-11-29 Portland, 12-4 Vancouver, 12-6 Seattle
    2014-AUS - 1-26 Sydney, 1-31 Adelaide, 2-11/12 EV Sydney State Theatre, 2-13 EV Opera House
    2014 - USA - Memphis, Detroit, MOLINE, St. Paul, MILWAUKEE, Denver, 25/26 Bridge School
    2016 - Lexington, Philly x 2, MSG x 2, Quebec City, Ottawa, Toronto x 2, Pemberton, Fenway x 2, Wrigley x 2
    2018 - Seattle x 2, Missoula, Fenway x 2
  • bradklausen
    bradklausen Posts: 441
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
  • PJNB
    PJNB Posts: 13,890
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
  • bradklausen
    bradklausen Posts: 441
    PJNB said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
    It's not up to us, the artists. The bands / merch companies dictate what we get paid. Usually it's 100 posters. Us artists, we aren't allowed to print any more then the band / merch company allots us. 
  • PJNB
    PJNB Posts: 13,890
    PJNB said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
    It's not up to us, the artists. The bands / merch companies dictate what we get paid. Usually it's 100 posters. Us artists, we aren't allowed to print any more then the band / merch company allots us. 
    Thanks for the insight. I didn't know that was how it worked. Congrats on a beautiful print. It looks like it sold out fast at the venue too. 
  • nicknyr15
    nicknyr15 Posts: 9,222
    PJNB said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
    It's not up to us, the artists. The bands / merch companies dictate what we get paid. Usually it's 100 posters. Us artists, we aren't allowed to print any more then the band / merch company allots us. 
    I appreciate your interest in stopping these flippers that have no interest in your work other than quick money. Ive missed out on every AP for EV tour and it hurts to see them eBay before they even have them in hand. Oh well. Excellent job on the poster. Hopefully I'll score a show edition from the 10c shop eventually. 
  • PJ-Cubs
    PJ-Cubs Posts: 3,377
    PJNB said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
    It's not up to us, the artists. The bands / merch companies dictate what we get paid. Usually it's 100 posters. Us artists, we aren't allowed to print any more then the band / merch company allots us. 
    Since, we are talking about the business, I have always wondered how artists decide what price to sell their prints at.  I am assuming that it is difficult balancing making the art accessible for fans and ensuring that you are not leaving money on the table for flippers to grab in the secondary market.
  • cp3iverson
    cp3iverson Posts: 8,702
    I hope Mumford drops 300 prints
  • tempo_n_groove
    tempo_n_groove Posts: 41,384
    ISO a Zippo from the shows!

    If anybody can help out that'd be great!

    Enjoy the show!
  • bradklausen
    bradklausen Posts: 441
    PJ-Cubs said:
    PJNB said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
    It's not up to us, the artists. The bands / merch companies dictate what we get paid. Usually it's 100 posters. Us artists, we aren't allowed to print any more then the band / merch company allots us. 
    Since, we are talking about the business, I have always wondered how artists decide what price to sell their prints at.  I am assuming that it is difficult balancing making the art accessible for fans and ensuring that you are not leaving money on the table for flippers to grab in the secondary market.
    It is tough. When I first started making posters in 04/05, the thing I always liked about gigposters was they were inexpensive cool art. So if you don't have a lot of money, you could go to a show and get a cool piece of art for about $20-25. I always liked that idea of affordable, cool, screen printed art. I still do. Which is why I try and keep my prices on many of my posters reasonable. 

    That being said, we live in a society where we get this lovely hidden tax called inflation... the price of everything seems to just always be on a steady incline. Food, gas, housing... with the exception of the fluctuation of the price of gas, it seldom seems we ever see prices for our existence decline.  So I, like everyone else, need to exist in this world of a seemingly unending incline in the price of existence. 

    And I've watched the poster scene prices go up just like everything else goes up. With the pop culture / movie poster trend that took off so many years ago, I was somewhat amazed to see what people were charging for prints, and not always screen prints, but giclees too. 

    And I watch these pj poster sales and watch artists sell posters for $100+ 

    So I try and stick to that original idea that gigposters, to me at least, have always been these examples of cool, affordable art. But then times changes, and the cost of living goes up, and I watch what other artists are selling their work for and if they are moving their posters at those price points, and try and be somewhat comparable to the overall scene standard at the same time trying to maintain that belief that gigposters should be affordable. But then I also know what goes into making these posters, how much time and energy and love and angst, and that time and energy should be rewarded. 

    If a band, like PJ, has a fan base that loves and collects posters, and there's obviously a demand there, you don't want to leave money on the table and you can charge more. Even going from $60 to $65 or $70, seems like a big move to me, but then you watch artists sell posters for $100+ and they sell out instantly. So you see that and say, maybe I should raise my prices too, if the demand is there. 

    It's hard to figure out what to price posters at, and us artists will talk to one another and say "hey you did a poster for such and such band, how did it sell?" And they might say it was great, sold out relatively fast or shortly over a period of time, or they might say I barely sold any and am stuck with a stack of them. So you have to try and guess a lot of the time as to whether or not a poster will sell at a particular price point or not. Because it's happened to all of us artists at some point, where you price a poster too high, and it doesn't sell, so the next one you underprice because you don't want to get stuck with inventory again and it sells too fast and you realize you could have charged more. Happens all the time. 

    For me I try and keep poster prices around the $30 - 45 range, unless it's for a band that has a fan base that collects poster, like PJ or say Phish, then you can charge more because you know there's more demand. 

    Art and commerce are tough, especially for most of us artists who aren't always very business savvy or financially minded. It's truly a blessing (and I say that not as a religious person) to get to make any amount of money selling your art; but for most artists, the business / commerce side is the foreign / unfamiliar side of the process. I never set out to have my own online store, and I remember when I first started selling posters all the sudden I was now taking people's CC info and their money and having to be a customer service agent answering emails and dealing with financial issues from sales,... it's something I am very grateful for as it allows me to continue to exist making a living selling my art, but I never wanted to get into commerce and business... and I think that's true of many artist, many are just winging it when it comes to the business side of things, but if you do it long enough, you kind of figure out a happy medium, but every sale always seems like a crap shoot... you never know how people will respond to each new poster. 

    that was long and rambly, sorry, must mean I am putting off doing something else! 
  • AmishGuy91
    AmishGuy91 Posts: 834
    Thanks for the insight Brad.  I totally agree that if the print is gonna sell for hundreds on the secondary market, I'd rather it just sell for that initially so the artist gets the profits.  
  • KC138045
    KC138045 Columbus, OH Posts: 2,716
    PJ-Cubs said:
    PJNB said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
    It's not up to us, the artists. The bands / merch companies dictate what we get paid. Usually it's 100 posters. Us artists, we aren't allowed to print any more then the band / merch company allots us. 
    Since, we are talking about the business, I have always wondered how artists decide what price to sell their prints at.  I am assuming that it is difficult balancing making the art accessible for fans and ensuring that you are not leaving money on the table for flippers to grab in the secondary market.
    It is tough. When I first started making posters in 04/05, the thing I always liked about gigposters was they were inexpensive cool art. So if you don't have a lot of money, you could go to a show and get a cool piece of art for about $20-25. I always liked that idea of affordable, cool, screen printed art. I still do. Which is why I try and keep my prices on many of my posters reasonable. 

    That being said, we live in a society where we get this lovely hidden tax called inflation... the price of everything seems to just always be on a steady incline. Food, gas, housing... with the exception of the fluctuation of the price of gas, it seldom seems we ever see prices for our existence decline.  So I, like everyone else, need to exist in this world of a seemingly unending incline in the price of existence. 

    And I've watched the poster scene prices go up just like everything else goes up. With the pop culture / movie poster trend that took off so many years ago, I was somewhat amazed to see what people were charging for prints, and not always screen prints, but giclees too. 

    And I watch these pj poster sales and watch artists sell posters for $100+ 

    So I try and stick to that original idea that gigposters, to me at least, have always been these examples of cool, affordable art. But then times changes, and the cost of living goes up, and I watch what other artists are selling their work for and if they are moving their posters at those price points, and try and be somewhat comparable to the overall scene standard at the same time trying to maintain that belief that gigposters should be affordable. But then I also know what goes into making these posters, how much time and energy and love and angst, and that time and energy should be rewarded. 

    If a band, like PJ, has a fan base that loves and collects posters, and there's obviously a demand there, you don't want to leave money on the table and you can charge more. Even going from $60 to $65 or $70, seems like a big move to me, but then you watch artists sell posters for $100+ and they sell out instantly. So you see that and say, maybe I should raise my prices too, if the demand is there. 

    It's hard to figure out what to price posters at, and us artists will talk to one another and say "hey you did a poster for such and such band, how did it sell?" And they might say it was great, sold out relatively fast or shortly over a period of time, or they might say I barely sold any and am stuck with a stack of them. So you have to try and guess a lot of the time as to whether or not a poster will sell at a particular price point or not. Because it's happened to all of us artists at some point, where you price a poster too high, and it doesn't sell, so the next one you underprice because you don't want to get stuck with inventory again and it sells too fast and you realize you could have charged more. Happens all the time. 

    For me I try and keep poster prices around the $30 - 45 range, unless it's for a band that has a fan base that collects poster, like PJ or say Phish, then you can charge more because you know there's more demand. 

    Art and commerce are tough, especially for most of us artists who aren't always very business savvy or financially minded. It's truly a blessing (and I say that not as a religious person) to get to make any amount of money selling your art; but for most artists, the business / commerce side is the foreign / unfamiliar side of the process. I never set out to have my own online store, and I remember when I first started selling posters all the sudden I was now taking people's CC info and their money and having to be a customer service agent answering emails and dealing with financial issues from sales,... it's something I am very grateful for as it allows me to continue to exist making a living selling my art, but I never wanted to get into commerce and business... and I think that's true of many artist, many are just winging it when it comes to the business side of things, but if you do it long enough, you kind of figure out a happy medium, but every sale always seems like a crap shoot... you never know how people will respond to each new poster. 

    that was long and rambly, sorry, must mean I am putting off doing something else! 
    Thanks for the insight!
    Columbus-2000
    Columbus-2003
    Cincinnati-2006
    Columbus-2010
    Wrigley-2013
    Cincinnati-2014
    Lexington-2016
    Wrigley 1 & 2-2018
  • iO letsgo
    iO letsgo Posts: 192
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    i haven't been on the forums much lately and then i see this today and had to comment.  so awesome to see an artist conversing and sharing his opinions with us here on the forums.  i will admit the whole poster flipping thing has really turned me off in recent years and that's unfortunate because it used to be such a simple way to remember and appreciate a show.  anyway, just want to say thanks for all that you do brad!  met you back at PJ20 and have been loving your art for years, keep on rockin!
  • MKSNYC
    MKSNYC NYC Posts: 366
    Agree with other comments - very nice of Brad to share some insight!  Also - keep putting out those cool posters - yours are some of the best!
  • Ray J. T.
    Ray J. T. Posts: 4,130
    PJ-Cubs said:
    PJNB said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    I have always wondered why so few AP's are printed. There is clearly a demand for this print so why is it so limited? You are clearly leaving money on the table by not making more no? I realize you do not want to have extra prints just lying around that did not sell but you must have known this one was going to sell a lot. Sorry new to the poster game just curious why things have to be so limited. 
    It's not up to us, the artists. The bands / merch companies dictate what we get paid. Usually it's 100 posters. Us artists, we aren't allowed to print any more then the band / merch company allots us. 
    Since, we are talking about the business, I have always wondered how artists decide what price to sell their prints at.  I am assuming that it is difficult balancing making the art accessible for fans and ensuring that you are not leaving money on the table for flippers to grab in the secondary market.
    It is tough. When I first started making posters in 04/05, the thing I always liked about gigposters was they were inexpensive cool art. So if you don't have a lot of money, you could go to a show and get a cool piece of art for about $20-25. I always liked that idea of affordable, cool, screen printed art. I still do. Which is why I try and keep my prices on many of my posters reasonable. 

    That being said, we live in a society where we get this lovely hidden tax called inflation... the price of everything seems to just always be on a steady incline. Food, gas, housing... with the exception of the fluctuation of the price of gas, it seldom seems we ever see prices for our existence decline.  So I, like everyone else, need to exist in this world of a seemingly unending incline in the price of existence. 

    And I've watched the poster scene prices go up just like everything else goes up. With the pop culture / movie poster trend that took off so many years ago, I was somewhat amazed to see what people were charging for prints, and not always screen prints, but giclees too. 

    And I watch these pj poster sales and watch artists sell posters for $100+ 

    So I try and stick to that original idea that gigposters, to me at least, have always been these examples of cool, affordable art. But then times changes, and the cost of living goes up, and I watch what other artists are selling their work for and if they are moving their posters at those price points, and try and be somewhat comparable to the overall scene standard at the same time trying to maintain that belief that gigposters should be affordable. But then I also know what goes into making these posters, how much time and energy and love and angst, and that time and energy should be rewarded. 

    If a band, like PJ, has a fan base that loves and collects posters, and there's obviously a demand there, you don't want to leave money on the table and you can charge more. Even going from $60 to $65 or $70, seems like a big move to me, but then you watch artists sell posters for $100+ and they sell out instantly. So you see that and say, maybe I should raise my prices too, if the demand is there. 

    It's hard to figure out what to price posters at, and us artists will talk to one another and say "hey you did a poster for such and such band, how did it sell?" And they might say it was great, sold out relatively fast or shortly over a period of time, or they might say I barely sold any and am stuck with a stack of them. So you have to try and guess a lot of the time as to whether or not a poster will sell at a particular price point or not. Because it's happened to all of us artists at some point, where you price a poster too high, and it doesn't sell, so the next one you underprice because you don't want to get stuck with inventory again and it sells too fast and you realize you could have charged more. Happens all the time. 

    For me I try and keep poster prices around the $30 - 45 range, unless it's for a band that has a fan base that collects poster, like PJ or say Phish, then you can charge more because you know there's more demand. 

    Art and commerce are tough, especially for most of us artists who aren't always very business savvy or financially minded. It's truly a blessing (and I say that not as a religious person) to get to make any amount of money selling your art; but for most artists, the business / commerce side is the foreign / unfamiliar side of the process. I never set out to have my own online store, and I remember when I first started selling posters all the sudden I was now taking people's CC info and their money and having to be a customer service agent answering emails and dealing with financial issues from sales,... it's something I am very grateful for as it allows me to continue to exist making a living selling my art, but I never wanted to get into commerce and business... and I think that's true of many artist, many are just winging it when it comes to the business side of things, but if you do it long enough, you kind of figure out a happy medium, but every sale always seems like a crap shoot... you never know how people will respond to each new poster. 

    that was long and rambly, sorry, must mean I am putting off doing something else! 
    Thanks for the insight Brad. Hands down one of my favorite artists for this band. Of all my PJ gig prints your work is the one I own most of. Please keep those beautiful prints coming. 
  • bradklausen
    bradklausen Posts: 441
    iO letsgo said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    i haven't been on the forums much lately and then i see this today and had to comment.  so awesome to see an artist conversing and sharing his opinions with us here on the forums.  i will admit the whole poster flipping thing has really turned me off in recent years and that's unfortunate because it used to be such a simple way to remember and appreciate a show.  anyway, just want to say thanks for all that you do brad!  met you back at PJ20 and have been loving your art for years, keep on rockin!
    I try and come to the forums on the days of my sales to be available in case there's any weird issues that happen... which they do from time to time, so it's good to have direct, instant access to folks so you can explain what's going on if something weird has happened and to keep them up to date. 

    plus I am a poster nerd too, so I am lurking in this thread anyway, because, I like all of you, can't wait to see what people come up with for each new poster. Am hoping Mike Fudge gets an EV poster, been digging his work lately and seems like he's hitting a stride with gigposters.

    thanks to all of you guys for what you all do, if it weren't for the fans, there'd be no shows to make posters for! 


  • drakeheuer14
    drakeheuer14 Posts: 4,619
    edited June 2017
    iO letsgo said:
    scurtis said:
    nicknyr15 said:
    5 on the bay already haha. What a fuckin joke. I don't know why I still get surprised by this. I really should be used to it by now. People don't even wait to have it in hand anymore! 
    It pisses me off too, especially when's I miss out,
    It pisses me off more... I don't want to sell to people who only care about a poster as a voucher to make themselves a little money, I don't spend all this time and energy making art for fans of any band so some person can waltz in at the last minute and take what I made and make a few bucks for themselves for doing absolutely nothing

    If you guys do some clever sleuthing, and ask the sellers questions about their location or find out their name, I can cancel their orders.  

    Always amazes me people sell something on ebay they don't have yet. 
    i haven't been on the forums much lately and then i see this today and had to comment.  so awesome to see an artist conversing and sharing his opinions with us here on the forums.  i will admit the whole poster flipping thing has really turned me off in recent years and that's unfortunate because it used to be such a simple way to remember and appreciate a show.  anyway, just want to say thanks for all that you do brad!  met you back at PJ20 and have been loving your art for years, keep on rockin!
    I try and come to the forums on the days of my sales to be available in case there's any weird issues that happen... which they do from time to time, so it's good to have direct, instant access to folks so you can explain what's going on if something weird has happened and to keep them up to date. 

    plus I am a poster nerd too, so I am lurking in this thread anyway, because, I like all of you, can't wait to see what people come up with for each new poster. Am hoping Mike Fudge gets an EV poster, been digging his work lately and seems like he's hitting a stride with gigposters.

    thanks to all of you guys for what you all do, if it weren't for the fans, there'd be no shows to make posters for! 


    Yesss Mike Fudge is the best 'new' artist in the poster game. All of his stuff has been great so far. I am really hoping for one too
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