Diamondback Cards
First printing 1981
Oddly enough,
even while we were running the Cerebus’
Six Deadly Sins portfolio ad on the inside back cover of issues 26 through
30, the only mention of the first series of Diamondback cards came in Deni’s
“Note from the Publisher” in issue 29, indicating that they were to be offered
as a fan-club premium and would be sent to anyone joining the fan club prior to
the 1981 San Diego Con. Shortly
thereafter we would take over the running of the fan club from Fred Patten for
several years but, the inescapable fact remained that Cerebus was never really
a “fan club” type of thing. As I
recall, the first series of Diamondback cards were our attempt to give Fred
something to really attract enough fans to make his efforts worthwhile—they
were printed on good quality cardstock, with four-colour backs and an
illustrated envelope. But it was all
for naught and when we folded the fan club we ended up selling most of the
decks through Now & Then Books and through the mail at $3.00 or so per pack
after the distributors had ordered an initial number of decks (as Deni
mentioned in her Note from the Publisher in issue 32). The direct market, at the time, just wasn’t
set up to sell cards in any great quantity.
Kind of funny when you consider that the collectible card market
virtually swamped the comic-book field for a period of time in the late
eighties and early nineties.
I really worked
to make the cards as attractive as possible and even incorporated the images
into the “Cerebus Held Hostage” sequence in issue 27 (High Society pages 40 to 46) to get that “tie-in” thing
happening. In doing the hand separations
on the back, I used some of the most subtle four-colour combinations I had in
my separations book and made sure every one of them was cut as cleanly as I
could with an X-acto knife. A subtle
shade of brown, a subtle shade of ruby red.
Then the cards came back and Cerebus was an albino. I had forgotten to slap a basic 30% gray on
‘im. D’OH! Of course
you’ll have to take my word for it, unless you manage to successfully bid on
the unsealed pack. Or unless you’re
willing to make the sealed pack a lot less rare by cutting it open.
It’s your
call.
Good luck.