Just curious to know if people prefer keeping the old thicker paper than the slimmer copies. Cheers all!
Just curious to know if people prefer keeping the old thicker paper than the slimmer copies. Cheers all!
I would assume that most people prefer thick, quality paper over flimsy and thin see-through paper.
I'm generalizing, but the older Omnibuses had the better paper, but the glued binding, and the newer ones have the thinner paper, but stitched binding.
I think new omnibuses in future will heve blued binding and uber thiner paper
Marvel omnibues that had glued binding was about 10 pcs in the beginning, rest of them was sewn and had better paper than that what we have now.
I prefer older printings for their quality, newer printings for their quantity.
If that makes any sense?
One thing I prefer about the new printings is they are generally slimmer, due to the thinner paper. At least in the case of reprints. Thick paper is preferred, but it's not worth it at the size some of these thing reach. I'm generally uninterested in anything above 900 pages.
Aside from the differences between paper quality there is also the disadvantage that older collected editions tended to have pages or panels edited or removed.
Indeed it is.
Exactly!
There was literally a handful of Omnibuses that were glued and some were first prints that were rapidly replaced by sewn prints (Spidey 1, UXM 1, DD Miller...). The majority of us who have older Omnibuses have sewn prints. The only old Omnibus I have that is glued and I don't mind having because of the faux leather and thicker paper is Silver Surfer 1.
And yes, unfortunately, the quality is ever decreasing.
I guess my point was, with OP's question, it doesn't seem like it works as an either or question. It's a range of difference omnibus construction/quality over the years. There's probably a sweet spot somewhere of non-glued binding but without paper as thin as it is in 2021.
Like, you may not want a 2005 glued Omnibus, but a 2013 reprint probably has better paper quality than the 2021 reprint.