I organize mine by color so that they look pretty on the shelf.
Style over substance, baby.
Style over substance, baby.
I agree*ramblings*...
I do not have it anywhere. Enjoyed them in the theatre, but not ones I want to own.Do you have Die Hard in with the Christmas films?
I have to say that the OP's DVD dilemma is more in keeping with my book dilemma. I started collecting science fiction books in November 1975 (first two I acquired were Star Trek 4 and 6; still have them safely on my very large Star Trek shelf in the living room). I branched out into collecting fantasy in 1985, after a friend got me addicted to the Dragonlance series (now that series needs a whole big bookshelf all by itself).
Some time back a couple of people decided to help organize my books, and decided that everything with a yellow spine should go together because it "looked better." They were flabbergasted when I told them I would have to redo that because they'd mixed up authors, series, and genres, and some series aren't published by the same company. Just because a book has a yellow DAW spine, that doesn't mean it's got anything in common with another book with a yellow DAW spine. And when I tried explaining how I organized the Star Trek stuff, their eyes glazed over. Not sure why; organizing by genre, author/series, novel/anthology, edition, etc. seems pretty straightforward to me.
As for DVDs, thank goodness I don't have so many of them that I can't just glance at the shelves to have a look. Star Trek isn't a problem because I don't own any Star Trek DVDs - just two or three VHS tapes plus some audio versions of a few novels, and an 8-track recording of one of William Shatner's convention appearances (wasn't able to take the 8-track player with me when I moved, so I can't listen to it anymore). And there are no worries about Star Wars; I have the VHS set that came out before Lucas started "improving" them. That's good enough.
I have a Library Thing membership for keeping track of books (haven't updated it in quite awhile); I'll have to see if it could be used to catalogue DVDs as well...
As for displaying books/DVDs so people can see them? I don't care if other people like it. I'm the one who lives here, so things are organized to please me. If visitors don't like it, they have my permission not to look.
But in my experience, most people see the various SF/F/gaming stuff and tend to have a "gosh, you sure have a lot of books/movies, have you read/seen all of them?" reaction.
Nope. Not by a long shot. If I were to read a book a day of everything I haven't read so far, I would have at least 3 years' worth of reading before running out... assuming I never bought anything else in the meantime, and assuming I could actually get through some of those really long books in a single day.
As for the DVDs, I've probably seen most of what's in my collection. I don't tend to buy programs or movies unless i already know I like them.
Displaying stuff can result in interesting conversations, as occasionally happened when I used to have a couple of home-based businesses. Things got odd sometimes, though. My grandmother was upset at me displaying my D&D books ("what will your customers THINK?!"). It never occurred to her that her carved, shrunken heads might be a wee bit disturbing to people who didn't know she was a dollmaker... I just explained to my customer that my grandmother was a headhunter, smiled nicely, and got on with the reason they'd originally come over.
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