This weekend was our second trip to the Central Canada Comic Con. Well, first technically, as previously the convention was called the Manitoba Comic Con.
The thing that C4 has going for it, apart from being the only comics convention in an entire province, is that Artist Alley tables are free, to bring in outside talent and to offset travel costs. You can’t beat that.
We thought it was a bit weird to have a convention on Halloween. Wouldn’t people have plans? But the new Victoria con is on the same weekend. Perhaps people are in costume already and don’t have anything better to do before nightfall. Who knows?
Because it was Halloween, Michael wore his Jedi costume and I busted out my Sith costume. Which was awesome, and helped to bring folks to the table.
–At least the Jedi did. Seated, I just appeared to be wearing black, which is not especially unusual. Particularly not for me. But those riding boots, oh dear and unpeaceable God, those riding boots. By 3:00 on Saturday, when we participated in a Star Wars photo shoot, they had my calves in their rubbery nerve grip, and were well on their way to becoming a permanent part of my anatomy. I had to enlist Michael’s help in removing them, and it was quite the undertaking. I don’t know what the congoers made of the straining and the grunting. Kyle took pictures, of course.
Last year attendees weren’t too interested in prints, but were ravenous for business cards and Lisa sold quite a few commissions. Printed comic sales were lowish. So, based on that, we had Diaperman character giveaway cards (designed to ease people into the not-immediately-obvious-and-somewhat-offputting Diaperman world) and the remaining TDA Issue Zero, which had gone very well as free giveaways at the Gathering.
And I had the Spanker comic, which arrived in the mail on Tuesday. The wire, I was just under it. I had 25 copies and I didn’t even remotely expect to run out of it. For some reason people will not cough up $4 for an indie self-published comic–or even $2 for TDA0. However, the more printed comics you have on the table, the more professional you look.
The expected mover was my Doctor Who magnets. Small inexpensive magnets have always done well for Lisa, and last year Winnipeg was hungry for Doctor Who and Venture Brothers material.
I had wanted a magnetic display stand, because when they’re laying flat on the table they look like stickers. We found one, that looks like a little refrigerator for them to stick to. It even says FRIDGE. However, the eBay seller would only ship to the UK, and Michael’s contact in England was able to buy them but not to ship them to us in time, unfortunately.
Table-positioning-wise, they treated us like rock stars. They gave Michael and I an endcap, which meant that I could put my floor banner beside the table rather than behind it, and the corner Kyle shared with us made him the first thing anyone saw when they came in the main doors. Literally the first thing. I don’t know that it increased sales, but it certainly increased traffic.
Traffic was good. It wasn’t as elbow-to-elbow as the Calgary Expo is, but I think the room was spaced out more.
As for sales, I sold out of the Catfight print, which is odd because it’s not that new and, as I said, prints didn’t move that much before. Maybe the banner being in front of the table did that. Interestingly, kids were all OVER it–because they loved the tiny Spider-Man in the background. And the Batsignal. Black Cat and Catwoman they couldn’t give a flying eff about.
Lisa opted to stay home this year, as she hadn’t sold enough last year to justify the travel. However, she sent along her remaining Slave Leia prints, which I sold seven of. So she did quite well for a convention she didn’t even attend!
Magnets did okay. Not as much as Lisa had expected. A few of the Cyberman magnets sold to people who didn’t watch Doctor Who and had no idea what the tiny robot was. Huh.
We sold three of the $30 Diaperman Graphic Novel. The LAST three Lulu prints, actually–the two Michael had and my own copy which I had brought along for show. So, sold out of those now; we can sell a $30 book but not a $3 issue. The art in the book is older and worse so I cannot wrap my head around it.
Next year: Diaperman 14 and Twilight Detective Agency 1. Not because they’ll sell but because it looks good to have a spin rack. Magnets again. An ashcan of TDA0 that’s printed ourselves, because the remaining giveaway comics were gone by Saturday closing. And we’re out of Diaperman website postcards, too. And a blue print book–it may be time to cross that line.
Maybe I’ll Costco-print pieces at larger sizes? It’s more expensive than laser-printing them, but not prohibitively so.
And I did one commission, from a fella who originally wanted Sailor Moon but decided on Marvel girls instead. He was shy and nervous and I think he wanted something a bit more next-level but wasn’t ready to ask. But I gave him my e-mail address. He’ll ask. And I’m sure, whatever it is, it won’t shock me. —Though I probably wouldn’t mind if it did, frankly. I’m always thrilled when the Internet shows me something I hadn’t previously thought of.
As always, so fun! I love conventions.












awesome commentary, so engaging.
Comment by Jill Pickrell — November 2, 2009 @ 7:44 am
Saw you at C4 and was one of the lucky buyers of the $30 book
I wanted to chime in and explain why it might be easier to sell a $30 book than a $4 comic, based on why I bought mine (and incidentally, and regretfuly, did not buy the $4 comic
)
A few reasons:
1) Coming into the Diaperman universe with a cold-start, I felt the book, which went all the way back to the origins of both the style and the characters was a good intro.
2) If I ended up not liking it, at least I’ll have a nice signed book on my shelf to remember the convention experience (which was our first and generally a whole lot of awesome). The comic, I would eventually end up killing.
3) Honestly, and I feel the teensiest bit evil saying this, I spend WAY more money on trades and collected editions than I do on single issues these days. This is a combination of the fact that I can afford them (as opposed to when I was younger and pinched every penny for the next issue of Cerebus or TMNT); and also because I tend to do the vast majority of my comic reading when I am “on the go”. This means they get stuffed into a briefcase or backpack and comics just don’t survive that treatment.
4) Whenever I have the opportunity to buy direct from artists, I generally do. Both because having signed work makes me all wiggly inside, and because I feel that more of the $ ends up in their pocket. I hope this is the case
5) Lastly; I honestly didn’t pay much attention to the issues of Spanker sitting there?! For some reason, I guess I thought they were on display or something? Maybe a little “Issue 1 – Only $4″ sign or something would help nudge those of us from the land of tiny-brained folk in the right direction…
Anyway – those are my reasons for spending $30 instead of $4.
p.s. I really am kicking myself for not getting Spanker. The book was spiffy and I would really like more!
Comment by Nateloaf — November 28, 2009 @ 11:21 pm
Nate, your feedback is both valuable and insightful. If you surf on over to http://www.twogargs.com , you’ll find a “Contact Us” box. Click it and send us your address– for your helpful and honest comment, we’d like to send you a signed copy of the Spanker comic.
Also, would you mind if we re-posted your comment over on http://www.diaperman.net ?
Comment by Michael — November 29, 2009 @ 2:41 pm