I posted a report about the Pasadena Comic Con over on Facebook here), but this is a slightly expanded version. Click here to see the full photo gallery from the event.
I thoroughly enjoyed my experience exhibiting at the Pasadena Comic Con! I was pleasantly surprised by sales, but though I always enjoy engaging with people, my conversations and interactions with attendees at this show were especially fun and memorable! It was heartening to have people go out of their way to stop and tell me they loved my work, even if they didn’t end up buying anything. It’s always fun when I see people get struck by my work enough to stop dead in their tracks and come over, with many immediately “getting” the series based on the art and banners.What also helped was that the exhibitors next to me didn’t show up for some reason—the organizers stopped by to tell me to just use the extra table for myself. So it was nice to spread out my original art on that table, which immediately turned me into a corner booth!
All-in-all, it was a pretty relaxed, chill show.
A few highlights:
A fairly young teen who liked the art and bought a random issue, before I could ask and curate what kind of story he might like. I wasn’t sure he bought an issue that might be the best fit (#25), but less than a couple hours later, he came by to enthusiastically tell me he already read it and loved it lol. Then later in the show, he stopped by with a Funko Pop he had purchased and asked me to sign it (I had already signed the issue he purchased from me). I confirmed that he really wanted my signature on it—he said, “You’re my favorite booth here!” I’m sure that was a bit of youthful exuberance, but appreciated nonetheless!
I mentioned to one woman who purchased a 4-pack after my usual pitch, that I have enjoyed discovering how many women liked my work. She said, “Oh, I’m a criminal defense attorney, so mystery, crime and spy stories stories are right up my alley!” She added, “My family all love the Marvels and DCs, but I love to support the indies!”
The guy who liked my American Flagg sketch (and the American Flagg inspired Rob Hanes Adventures banner at my booth), who said he didn’t like creator Howard Chaykin’s work and thought my Reuben Flagg was better. I immediately said emphatically, “NO IT’S NOT!” but thanks. After he acknowledged he’d never read a lot of it, I told him he should, and that it was actually as much a satire and a comedy as much as science fiction/action. (He also was wearing full army camo fatigues and kinda looked like actor Shea Whigham, complete with mustache, and from the way he spoke—the more we talked, I wasn’t sure if he was actually in the service or cosplaying, especially after he mentioned being an educator. I thought about asking but never found the chance to lol).As I mentioned in a previous post during the show, I was just across the way from the celebrity autograph section. The longest line always seemed to be for a voice actor (whose name I can’t recall and didn’t recognize), but fortunately, the queue for her was in the aisle behind me, not in front of my booth. But actor/comedian/voice actor Tom Kenny (SpongeBob Squarepants) hung out there quite a bit, meeting fans and taking photos with them. That was catty corner behind me—directly catty corner to me was Eric Roberts who was in the same row as Jerry Mathers (Leave It to Beaver), Greg Evigan, and Parker Stevenson. Also nearby were Charles Fleischer (voice of Roger Rabbit), Michael Gross, and Morgan Fairchild. I also saw little person actor Tony Cox there.
I got to say a quick hello to Gross when he arrived just as I was going to my table to set up and tell him I was a big fan. And when Roberts walked by, he good naturedly yelled out loudly, “When’s Rob showing up?!” During the show, I had a chance to say hello to Evigan and Mathers as they walked by.
I have to admit, other than the voice actor’s line (where Tom Kenny was hanging about), that was the only booth that drew a real crowd. The other celebrities (like us booth people) had steady foot traffic but also occasional downtime.
Above: Morgan Fairchild's booth—actor Michael Gross was behind her and at right in this photo |
I know at some conventions, the celebrity guest crowds can sometimes overwhelm and overshadow the comics and other booths, but that fortunately wasn’t the case here, even given my proximity to them. The show was pretty laid back—that said, I did feel a bit separated from other comics booths, as everyone around me primarily sold toys, t-shirts, memorabilia and the like. Not sure if that affected my foot traffic, but as I said, I was still happy with sales.
This was my first time exhibiting at this show. Though I’m familiar with Pasadena, I’d never been to the convention center before, so didn’t have it all down pat (like I do at San Diego!). As a result, I ended up in a parking structure a little further away from the convention center that required me to go up to street level, walk down the block, and into the convention center—versus the parking area just underneath the venue.However, it turned out to have its advantages since I didn’t have to wait in the lines I saw for the freight elevators at the convention center. (This was also the case at the end of the show when I had to break down and everyone was departing at the same time!) Though it took two trips to unload my car, I was able to tetris all of my booth items onto the wagon for the return trip—though, from observing someone else with a cart who had cargo straps, it convinced me to purchase a cargo net for the future!
I definitely hope to attend next year!
Click here to see the full photo gallery from the show.