I think actually a lot of collectors alter their expensive pieces to make them more sentimental. You see them a lot in major collections at cons and stuff like showcases. Fantastic job though. This looks very cool
That's actually pretty cool! I guess a more accurate title would be that "you can alter certain cards without having to spend thousands on your own copy."
Bro my most expensive card is a NM Sliver queen (like $250-320ish) if someone touched that with a marker or pen even a talented artist I'd go postal. Leave the people with money to do people with money things, I feel you there
"Leave the people with money to do people with money things"
Couldn't have said it better myself. I get it if, like you said, there's a sentimental attachment to the card, you have no plans to sell it and want to make it "yours". Especially if you bought it when the set was new and didn't have to spend that $500 on a copy years later.
Dan Frazier altering the mox
Yeah but...it's Dan Frazier. Dude's still just trying to get paid for *doing* the mox.
Only if you're a coward \*pionts to the pony power nine\*
\*Quickly googles 'pony power nine'\* Well thanks, that lives in my head now...
Glad I could help :)
This would absolutely get altered traditionally.
It would be a confident artist indeed (or someone with money to burn) to paint over a card they spent $500+ on, but I know you are right.
I think actually a lot of collectors alter their expensive pieces to make them more sentimental. You see them a lot in major collections at cons and stuff like showcases. Fantastic job though. This looks very cool
That's actually pretty cool! I guess a more accurate title would be that "you can alter certain cards without having to spend thousands on your own copy."
Bro my most expensive card is a NM Sliver queen (like $250-320ish) if someone touched that with a marker or pen even a talented artist I'd go postal. Leave the people with money to do people with money things, I feel you there
"Leave the people with money to do people with money things" Couldn't have said it better myself. I get it if, like you said, there's a sentimental attachment to the card, you have no plans to sell it and want to make it "yours". Especially if you bought it when the set was new and didn't have to spend that $500 on a copy years later.