The Blind Vision Variant - McFarlane Legacy
Spider-Man 1 Silver Edition

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COMIC DETAILS

Comic Description: Spider-Man 1 Signature
Grade: 9.6
Page Quality: WHITE
Certification #: 1277115001
Owner: The Blind Vision Variant

SET DETAILS

Custom Sets: The Blind Vision Variant - Stan Lee & Todd McFarlane
Sets Competing: The Blind Vision Variant  Score: 44
The Blind Vision Variant - McFarlane Legacy  Score: 44
Research: See CGC’s Population Report

Owner's Description

"The Blind Vision Variant" (CGC #1277115001) – A Documented Historical Artifact.

I acquired this specific copy of Spider-Man #1 due to a striking anomaly: Stan Lee’s black marker runs directly into Todd McFarlane’s yellow autograph. While the collector's market often dismisses such overlaps as careless aesthetic "defects," the context reveals a profound medical and historical reality. I wanted to find out what really happened that day.

When fans see "sloppy" signatures, discussions usually default to the tragic elder abuse of his final years. That is a heartbreaking part of his story, but we have to look at the dates. That darkest period escalated after the passing of his wife in 2017. This book was signed on November 20, 2014. At that time, his primary enemy wasn't people—it was biology.

Court records (Stan Lee v. POW! Entertainment, 2018) confirm he was diagnosed with advanced macular degeneration (AMD) in 2011. Just weeks after this late-2014 signing, in early 2015, he was officially deemed legally blind.

This medical fact completely changes how we view this slab. Advanced AMD destroys the center of the retina, creating a massive central blind spot. With that kind of visual field loss, this entire black-and-silver cover was merely an unrecognizable, dark void to him. Stan literally could not see where to place the marker.

And then it hit me. McFarlane’s bright yellow autograph acted as the only contrasting beacon—the only flash of color that could pierce through Lee's surviving peripheral vision. Hitting that exact spot wasn't an accident or carelessness. His eye instinctively caught that yellow shape as the sole "signpost" in the black void. He didn’t overwrite Todd’s signature—he physically rested his own on it out of necessity.

For the market, it's a defect, but from the perspective of comic book history, it carries an immense weight. The fading co-creator of Spider-Man physically leaning on the autograph of the artist who visually redefined the character for a new era. It looks like an unintended, biologically forced passing of the torch. The fact that this raw record of physical decline and willpower was immortalized on an issue appropriately subtitled "TORMENT - Part One of Five" adds a deeply symbolic dimension.

Throughout his life, Stan Lee wove real science and human struggles into his comics. I didn't want this story to be lost, because it is the perfect continuation of that tradition. It’s a hard lesson in empathy and quite literally not judging a comic book by its cover. This slab is physical proof of his life's motto, "Excelsior!"—moving forward and never giving up, despite the pain and limitations.

Since the beginning of the year, I have been building this project in my spare time—The Blind Vision Variant—so that all of this survives as a digital museum. I divided the story into 5 chapters, treating it as a closure—my own "Torment - Part Five of Five". You can check out the full investigation here: https://theblindvisionvariant.com



 
 
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