Non-Sport Update — August-September 2017

(avery) #1

Where It All Began


A year after the series premiered, Inkworks released a set


based on the first season. Buffy The Vampire Slayer Season


One offered up a 72-card base set that included several


cards devoted to each episode, along with three subsets


and a checklist. Chase cards included a nine-card set, The


Chosen One, plus six Slayer Kit


Cards that depicted the weapons


used by Buffy. There was also


an ultra-rare Coffin Card that


described how to kill a vampire,


inserted one per 108 packs.


Four autograph cards were


included in this set, and they are


among the most valuable cards in


the BTVS trading card pantheon.


Mark Metcalf (The Master), David


Boreanaz (Angel), Alyson Hanni-


gan (Willow) and the show’s creator


and producer, Joss Whedon, signed the


inaugural autograph cards, and they


remain highly sought-after by collectors.


Extras for Buffy The Vampire Slayer


Season One included a box loader that


previewed Season Two, an uncut sheet


of The Chosen One chases, an illustrated


binder, several promos, and a five-card


set that was exclusive to Suncoast Video.


Needless to say, this set was a mon-


ster. BTVS was so much in demand


that additional sets were inevitable.


Over the next nine years Inkworks


created more than a dozen sets devoted to Buffy.


Seasons two through seven each received a card set,


released several months after the season ended, and they


largely followed the format of the Season One set. The num-


ber of cards in the base jumped to 90, but there were usually


two or more extra chase sets, one ultra rare insert card and


autograph cards, which grew in number from five in season


two to fourteen in the final seventh season.


More To The Story


Demand for BTVS cards was so high that Inkworks


had to find a way to fill in the gaps between seasons. They


produced a 54-card set of oversized (4" x 6") photo cards in


1999, and starting in 2000 they began producing themed


sets that would plunder images from all available seasons


just to keep Buffy’s fans satisfied.


The growing number of autographs and the addition of


Pieceworks cards to the later BVS sets mirror the changes


that were taking place in the hobby at the time. The number


of box loaders also increased to three and there were always


a plethora of promo cards. Almost every gimmick and spe-


cial insert was tried at one time or another. About the only


thing Inkworks didn’t give collectors were sketch cards.


Inkworks bowed out of the Buffy busi-


ness in 2007 with their memorable


Buffy TVS: 10th Anniversary set,


having produced a total of sixteen


full card sets based on the show, as


well as dozens of promotional cards


for companies as diverse as Johnny


Lightning and Chupa Chups, as


well as many conventions and


magazines. In 2001 and 2003, Ikon


Collectables produced two sets for


the Australian market.


The Values


Having been such a popular subject


for non-sport cards, Buffy The Vampire


Slayer can be quite affordable to begin


collecting, but collectors who get


drawn in will find that being a com-


pletest is a completely different matter.


Aside from the Season One set,


which will set you back fifteen to


thirty dollars, BTVS base sets can be


found for between four and fifteen


dollars. Even the 2004 Inkworks


Ultimate Buffy The Vampire Slayer


Collection, which reprinted all seven


season sets can be found by patient collectors for as little as


one-third of its original $299 retail price.


The chase sets command considerably higher prices, and


some of the Autograph and Pieceworks cards are among


the most expensive single trading cards of the modern era.


Several autograph cards, such as Charisma Carpenter, John


Ritter, Alyson Hannigan, and David Boreanaz regularly sell


for upwards of three hundred dollars. The Slayer’s Essential


Stake Pieceworks card from Inkworks’ tenth anniversary


set commands up to eight hundred dollars. Due to their


limited nature, the recent and upcoming BTVS sets from


Rittenhouse Archives are sure to be high dollar items, too.


The trading card legacy of Buffy The Vampire Slayer is


fairly epic, with thousands of cards produced over the years


and millions of loyal fans. It seems that Buffy may turn out


to be as immortal as her undead foes. NSU


10 Non-Sport Update


20 YeArS of BuffY


Marking its 25th anniversary, a


Buffy The Vampire Slayer movie was


released pre-TV series in 1992. Events


of the film, which starred Kristy Swan-


son as Buffy, are briefly mentioned in


the TV show’s 1st episode, providing


Buffyverse continuity. Dark Horse pro-


duced a post-TV Seasons 8 through


11 canonical comic book series. No


trading cards have been produced for


any of these properties.


DID You KnoW?

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