Moving your Transformers Collection – Part 1: Sorting & Packing

Packing and moving.  Truly a terrible job.  Having to pack up the entire contents of a house and get them to a secondary desitnation safely is time consuming, back breaking and frankly boring.  But you can add to that list a hefty amount of stress if you have something like an expensive collection you have to move.

Sleep well my babies

When I moved out of home at 18, I was able to fit all the belongings of both my buddy and me in a small station wagon and my small box of G1 Transformers stayed at Mum’s.  When I moved to the country at the age of 33, I had accumulated over 900 TF figures and had a respectable amount of  comics, books and clothing to go with it, it took up a nice bit of space in the moving truck.

Now nearing 40 I am moving again and this time across states, a solid 10 hour drive from where I am now.  And my collection has grown expodentially!  Currently my collection boasts:

  • 2000 figures – over 100 of them MISB/MOSC
  • 500+ Comics
  • 40+ Books
  • 60+ DVDs/Blu Rays/Video Games
  • 80+ Pieces of clothing
  • Lots and LOTS of MISC (cups, mugs, board games, lunch boxes, backpacks, posters etc).

So probably about 3000 pieces all up.

 

Moving all this is very daunting.  Not only the sheer scope of packing it all in the first place, but packing it all in such a way that nothing will get lost or broken.  In this two part blog I will be sharing my tips for how to move your collection in such a way that it stays safe.  And thus we will start with Part 1: Packing.

 

Step 1: Sorting

Sorting action figures

Hot Shots in baggie

To make sure you leave nothing behind I strongly suggest you sort your collection.  How  you do this is up to you.  You may choose to sort via the toyline (G1, Beast Wars, Armada, Movieverse etc) but personally as a Multiverse collector I choose to go by the individual character.  This has the advantage of being able to bag them to keep them grouped whereas an entire toyline , especially ones that have big figures like Cybertron, might be too big for a single crate.  Also if your collection is smaller you might take the time to transform them all into vehicle modes to be more compact, though this was something time precluded me from doing.

In cases where you have a lot of characters you might even give them their own crate.  I have these for Optimus, Bumblebee, Starscream, Megatron etc.  With my Optimus I needed two huge crates, one for loose figures and one for MISB’s.

Too many Optimus for a baggie!

 

Sorting Paperwork

I have to give my wife credit for this one.  Very occasionally I get stuck with a TF that I haven’t transformed in many years and have forgotten how.  When this happens rather than dig through over 1000 instruction manuals I turn to youtube.  However where we are moving we wont have internet for quite a while so my wife sorted all my instruction manuals into 26 individual alphabetical plastic pockets.  This was also handy for checking I was not missing any accessories.

 

 

Sorting accessories

Missiles & launchers

Primarily you want to have them bagged with the figure they come with.  However if you have thousands of the buggers time may stop you from doing this.  In that case I recommend sorting them into bags of missiles, rifles, shields etc.  I’d also bag all your smaller figures like Kre-O in a similar fashion.

 

Step 2: Packing

As I’ve shown above, large plastic sealable bags are the go for keeping your robots separate.  But now the larger packing begins.  For this you will mainly use three different materials: cardboard boxes, cardboard tubes and plastic crates.

 

Cardboard boxes

Proper moving boxes
The TF boxes that other TF boxes come in

In these you can pack items that are not breakable.  This includes TF boxes you have kept (such as perhaps Unite Warriors or from busts) and Transformers clothing.  Other misc items such as backpacks, lunch boxes etc can be packed the same way.

 

Cardboard tubes

Used for all your Transformer posters.

 

Plastic Packing crates.

Expensive when you need a lot but worth it

Now these are really what you need for your figures.  The stronger construction will protect the figures from getting damaged and you can buy them up to a 140L size for around $20 each from places like The Reject Shop.  When packing these crates, try and pack them with similar toys.  I have all my versions of the Combaticon and Stunticon characters in one crate, all my versions of the 84’ Autobot cars in another and so on.

 

Bubble Wrap

Resist the urge to pop – you wont be able to stop!

If you wanna go the extra mile and pad all your plastic crates with bubble wrap on the inside it’s a good idea.  However if you have a collection as big as mine its probably impractical and I would suggest just bubble wrapping any of your irriplacable or particularly fragile items.

 

So, by following the above you should be able to get your collection, no matter how large or small, ready to move to its new home.  Please check back for part two – The Move!

All packed up and ready to go!

 

Got any tips to add to the above?  Would love to read them in the comments section below!

2 thoughts on “Moving your Transformers Collection – Part 1: Sorting & Packing”

  1. Also not a bad way to use all those TF shirts you don’t wear/have doubles of from family and friends is to use them in-between layers of transformers in the tubs, especially useful for the smaller and G1 figures that may slip between other layers or for things like alternators that you do not scratching each other!

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