Valiant original Micro Prints

In mid-2016, Valiant Comics launched an adventurous initiative. They inserted 50 reproduction “micro prints” into various X-O Manowar comic books (one per comic). These micro prints were 4×6″ black-&-white trading cards, and it would take months to collect them all. For example, X-O Manowar issue #47 included seven different prints including art from talent like Sean Chen, Tom Fowler, Jeff Lemire, and Rafer Roberts. Then a different batch of prints would be included in X-O Manowar issue #48. This continued for at least five months (if not more).

What made this program exciting is that “original art” (4×6″ sketch cards) would be randomly inserted; replacing the micro print. These almost never surface on eBay anymore now that they are tucked away in people’s personal collections, but they are remarkable in their diversity and talent. — Now I would be remiss not to mention that there was a completely unrelated Valiant Preview Trading Card Set (by Rittenhouse Archives in 2013) that had traditional sketch cards. But these original micro prints included many well-established comic book creators that otherwise have not drawn sketch cards before; as well as a few SCAD Atlanta art school students.  


The odds of finding original art were never specifically announced, but one collector bought 50 issues and found 2 original micro prints. So it’s plausible to guess that originals were inserted between 1:25 – 1:50 comics. In my opinion, those would be pretty good odds and return on value considering that a modern box of trading cards might cost over $120 and yield only one sketch card.


A checklist of the 50 reproduction “micro prints” was assembled by fans, but the artists contributing to the original sketch cards was never announced. Note: at Wondercon 2016, the Valiant promotion was first announced and the Cary Nord sketch seen above was given out at a panel (instead of inserted in a bagged comic). Each of the inserted Original Micro Prints has a Valiant “stamp” on the back. — There are also Artist’s Editions (like Artist Proofs) given directly to the Artists, which have a sticker on the front, but not a stamp on the back.


As mentioned earlier, these are hard to track down on eBay because they are rare, but also because collectors struggle what to call them in the description. Are they sketch cards, original micro prints, or XO Manowar insert postcards? I could only find two on eBay past-or-present, and they sold $20-50. Valiant collectors are still hunting these down and you can expects some bidding competition regardless of how they are titled.


This isn’t the first time original art has been inserted into blind-bag comics. For example, Chip Zdarsky randomly inserted original art into his comic book, “Sex Criminals” (issue #11), but that was art from a single artist applied directly to the cover of the comic book; and most of it looks rushed. This Valiant Comics event might be the most ambitious initiative using the largest group of artists ever attempted in a free comic book art giveaway. It deserves a lot more credit and appreciation. Thanks; and happy collecting!

#SketchCardContest – Day 03

Contest details at the bottom. Day 03 Topic: Abandoned Sets.

For whatever reason, some sets are abandoned mid-production. Maybe the production team ran out of money, or maybe the creators realized it was a bad idea to begin with. Today we will look at a couple sets only kind-of exist.

Dart Flipcards Inc. was a Canadian company that primarily created novelty Mini Lunch Boxes with licensed images on them. In 2002 they successfully created a The Crocodile Hunter trading card set. Around they same time, they attempted a Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer set that was abandoned after a lot of the printing was already done. Plenty of sketch cards still made it onto the secondary market. As far as I know, there were only two different artists involved.

Presidential Portraits by Pastime Cards was a much uglier situation. The release date was set for March 10, 2015. All sketch cards were completed and returned by the artists. Sets were being pre-sold. It appeared like everything was on-track, except the artists had not been paid yet. They were told that payment and blank artist proof cards would be provided after the set was released, and revenue was generated. Pastime Cards last tweeted February 2015, and in April 2015 their website was taken down. Some finished product was still sent to those that pre-ordered, but it was never available by distributers as far as I know. Dozens of artists went unpaid.  They undoubtedly knew by the time this set was released on March 10th that the company would not be moving forward.

In 2012, Valiant Comics were re-launched under a new investors and management. In 2013, Valiant had plans to create a trading card set, and started with a Preview Set (more information HERE). The preview set was a success, selling out of all 500 packs quickly, but the full set was never created. The promo card below had very few details; probably the first hint that the full set would never materialize. You can still find some Valiant sketch cards on the secondary market, but they all came out of preview sets.

Most recently, SadLittles switched streams. They have had plenty of successful sets including Dreamers of Darkness 2, and Aheago Anime earlier this year. But their two next planned sets became something else …

This was a Christmas-themed set that some artists had started, but would never get to finish. Maybe it was because they were coming too close to the Christmas season, and because of the length needed for production these wouldn’t be available until next year? It makes sense that these cards wouldn’t be as “sellable” after Christmas. Whatever the reason, Naughty Nick’s Elves was canned.

On the SadLittles Facebook page, they confirmed that Naughty Nick’s Elves AND another set called Heroes of Gold are headed to the scrap-yard. SadLittles is willing to sell the blank printed cardstock for $1.00 per card for artists to do whatever they want with.

What other sets got started but never finished? I imagine there has been more than one Kickstarter set that had all the card printed and ready to go, but never got funded. Oh well. Onto the Contest:

The Valiant Comics sketchcard mystery

In 1992, Valiant Comics released its first set of original comic titles (including Harbinger, X-O Manowar, Rai, and Shadowman). In 2005, a group of entrepreneurs led by Dinesh Shamdasani acquired the rights to the Valiant Comics library. In May 2012, Valiant Entertainment began publishing new monthly comic books based on the Valiant Comics universe of characters. In 2013, Valiant partnered with Rittenhouse Archives to release trading cards based on their re-launched characters. Here’s where it gets muddy. In June of 2013, Valiant distributed a promo card (labeled as ‘CP1’) at the HeroesCon convention in Charlotte, N.C., to start advance word-of-mouth. All it said was “Look for Valiant trading cards coming summer 2013.” They were passed out by a paid/official Valiant promotional team on the convention floor for a short window of time (maybe only a few hours on Friday afternoon). The promo cards were not distributed all weekend.  Very few ever surfaced.

 

According to the Rittenhouse Archives website, the initial Valiant trading card product was called the “Valiant Preview Trading Card Set” (with an official release date set for 07/17/2013). They would be initially offered as a San Diego Comic-Con exclusive, a week prior to the general release. The Preview Card Set was limited to only 500 numbered packs (nine base cards + one hand drawn original sketch card). These would be the first licensed Valiant sketch cards, and about 40 different artists participated. The SRP of a pack was set at $60 each. With only 500 total sets available, non-convention-attendees could preorder packs through various distributors. I still have questions, and would love help from collectors. I assume distributers would be allocated if preorders were greater than the 500-pack supply? Did everyone get the full number they ordered? Also, for many sketch card sets, artists are compensated with blank or “proof” sketch cards to sell on their own. Did any blank/proof cards ever get distributed?

 

The real question remains: Did the “Preview Card Set” point towards an original plan to create follow-up sets for the Valiant Comics trading card line? Again, the CP1 promo card simply stated: “Look for Valiant trading cards coming summer 2013,” and the word preview suggests a planned follow-up release. Was the original plan to create standard boxes of trading cards canceled? 500 sketch cards seems minuscule if the plan was to create traditional boxes and cases of cards for mass distribution. I’m going to need help on this one. I’m reaching out to anyone who pre-ordered, attended SDCC 2013, or was part of the set. There’s more to this story. Thanks & happy collecting (@sketchcards on Twitter).

UPDATE: One of the ValiantFans suggested I look at the volume of recent eBAY sales. There have been over 200 sketchcards sold since January. That’s a significant number. Surely no single person could have bought/opened 200 of the 500 available packs. There is speculation that more than 500 sketchcards were created (in the expectation of a future set) … and the recent eBAY sales may have been cards NOT included in the original 500 preview sets. Were these cards sold by Rittenhouse Archives? #NeedMoreResearch

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