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-   -   Frederick Photo Cards (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=259167)

LincolnVT 08-25-2018 02:47 PM

Frederick Photo Cards
 
I'm interested in seeing any cards from this scarce set that anyone might have.

oldjudge 08-25-2018 02:53 PM

LOL, since you traded for the Frederick's Foto Ruth, how often will you post about it?

LincolnVT 08-25-2018 04:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by oldjudge (Post 1807440)
LOL, since you traded for the Frederick's Foto Ruth, how often will you post about it?

It's a fair question...I wasn't planning to post another picture of it, but hey maybe I will. LOL!! was hoping to see any other Frederick Foto cards of players if people here have them.

Thanks.

ullmandds 08-25-2018 05:28 PM

FF cards are rare...you just don't see many at all.

Leon 08-25-2018 08:24 PM

Here are a few different type fronts from my last collection...

http://luckeycards.com/phunc1921frederickfotox4.jpg

LincolnVT 08-25-2018 09:21 PM

FF
 
Leon:

Those are beautiful...wondering if anyone has ever attempted to pull together the set.

Vintagecatcher 08-25-2018 09:35 PM

Frederick Foto cards (larger format)
 
2 Attachment(s)
In addition to the smaller standard cards, there are larger format Frederick Foto cards such as the two I own below.

Not sure if they are actually proofs or perhaps they were cut from an advertising poster.

Patrick

camlov2 08-25-2018 10:46 PM

<a href="https://ibb.co/cs29dz"><img src="https://preview.ibb.co/nutFJz/Frederick_F.jpg" alt="Frederick_F" border="0"></a>

Bicem 08-25-2018 11:00 PM

Very nice! What's the most desirable card in the set after Ruth?

Dewey 08-25-2018 11:36 PM

These are cool. New set to me.

LincolnVT 08-26-2018 02:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by camlov2 (Post 1807580)
<a href="https://ibb.co/cs29dz"><img src="https://preview.ibb.co/nutFJz/Frederick_F.jpg" alt="Frederick_F" border="0"></a>

Beautiful group Brian!

Leon 08-27-2018 07:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bicem (Post 1807583)
Very nice! What's the most desirable card in the set after Ruth?

I think there are a few that made the majors in the set but no big names, from what I remember. Here is a larger, photo from them...similar to the cards but a bit larger.

http://luckeycards.com/phunc1920sfre...ervicefoto.jpg

rhettyeakley 08-27-2018 09:10 AM

Frederick Foto was a Sacramento company so a lot of the players pictured have ties to Sacramento in some way but certainly not all of them.

The larger version of these I believe are actually the proofs that they used to make the small cards with. My copy you can see the ink or paint pen as a raised application on the surface of the card, and it is in the same spot as the name on the small/regular version.

The best player not named Babe Ruth may be Alexander. I have never seen this card so I am not sure if that is Grover Alexander as I see no Alexander playing in the PCL in 1921. There is also the possibility that a card will be found of Sam Crawford, Lefty O’Doul or Gavvy Cravath as they were all in the PCL that year.

Of the cards I have seen over the years IMO the best non Ruth card is one Leon just showed that was part of his collection (I now own it)... Ernie Shore. Shore was a popular Red Sox pitcher and one of Ruth’s fellow teammates and famously pitched a no hitter after Ruth was ejected from the game in the first inning for fighting with an umpire. Also interesting is that Joe Gedeon has a card and he was ejected along with the Black Sox after the 1920 season for knowledge of the fix.

Jason Carota 08-27-2018 07:00 PM

Any significance to the cards with the Frederick Foto logo versus the handwritten caption?

seattlerainiers 08-28-2018 09:15 AM

GC Alexander
 
1 Attachment(s)
Here's Alexander.

Bicem 08-28-2018 10:20 AM

Wow, guess that answers that. Thanks for sharing!

Kawika 08-28-2018 11:14 AM

Eskenazi for the killshot.
Brockelman & Luckey offered up a passel of the FF's several years ago. Here is my typecard.
http://photos.imageevent.com/kawika_...McGaffigan.jpg

rhettyeakley 08-28-2018 01:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by seattlerainiers (Post 1808241)
Here's Alexander.

Awesome card Dave, I always love seeing your hidden gems!

I had never seen the “Alexander” anywhere but the known checklist and figured it made the most sense for it to be Grover, seems like they decided to make the best batter of the day (Ruth) and perhaps the best pitcher (in their opinion) as neither player had any real connection to the PCL like the majority of the players in the set did. Neat to be able to confirm another card of one of the top 10 pitchers of all time!

Now someone just needs to find a Cobb as well (that would be an amazing card!)

JLange 08-29-2018 04:43 AM

Walter Mails
 
1 Attachment(s)
Not a Cobb, but here's a scan of Walter Mails (not mine) I've been looking for over the years.

LincolnVT 08-29-2018 10:04 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JLange (Post 1808515)
Not a Cobb, but here's a scan of Walter Mails (not mine) I've been looking for over the years.

Wow! The condition of the Mails and some of the others looks great. Ver cool cards everyone. Love the image quality of these. Thanks for sharing!!

seattlerainiers 08-30-2018 08:51 AM

The Great
 
1 Attachment(s)
Here are a few more of the ever-colorful Duster:

Leon 08-30-2018 09:36 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by oldjudge (Post 1807440)
LOL, since you traded for the Frederick's Foto Ruth, how often will you post about it?

LOL, I am glad your "comment" didn't ruin a great thread. Nice try though.

And it looks like JLange (hey Jlange) might need to add 3 more cards to his Mails want list?

prewarsports 08-30-2018 10:28 AM

Just for discussion sake, what makes these "cards". The issuer was the photographer which essentially just makes them photographs. They were not issued in conjunction with products (like 19th century card/photos) from anything I have seen and other sets of photographs do not get the same respect and classification. If they were 5x7 or 8X10 they would certainly just be a set of photos yet other series of photographs like those from the American League Service Bureau (which are actually numbered like cards) would fall into this same category. I know they are small and look like traditional baseball cards, but they clearly were developed on a full sheet with essentially no borders and trimmed down by the photographer.

At their base root, these are tiny "type 3" photographs developed in composite form and trimmed then given away by a photo studio in Sacramento. I have no skin in the game and am not trying to be controversial at all, just curious why these are "cards" and other sets of superior photographs (off their original negatives) from studios are not? I would be interested in others thoughts and I am in NO WAY downplaying anyone's cards or collections.

Rhys

ullmandds 08-30-2018 10:32 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by prewarsports (Post 1808871)
Just for discussion sake, what makes these "cards". The issuer was the photographer which essentially just makes them photographs. They were not issued in conjunction with products (like 19th century card/photos) from anything I have seen and other sets of photographs do not get the same respect and classification. If they were 5x7 or 8X10 they would certainly just be a set of photos yet other series of photographs like those from the American League Service Bureau (which are actually numbered like cards) would fall into this same category. I know they are small and look like traditional baseball cards, but they clearly were developed on a full sheet with essentially no borders and trimmed down by the photographer.

At their base root, these are tiny "type 3" photographs developed in composite form and trimmed then given away by a photo studio in Sacramento. I have no skin in the game and am not trying to be controversial at all, just curious why these are "cards" and other sets of superior photographs (off their original negatives) from studios are not? I would be interested in others thoughts and I am in NO WAY downplaying anyone's cards or collections.

Rhys

I was thinking the same thing this morning, esp after seeing all the diff mails poses

brianp-beme 08-30-2018 10:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ullmandds (Post 1808873)
I was thinking the same thing this morning, esp after seeing all the diff mails poses

No opinion on the photo/card issue, but it does make sense that there are multiple poses of Mails, because he played and had a good season for the Sacramento PCL team in 1920, and then made a big splash for the Cleveland Indians late in the 1920 season, going 7-0 and winning a World Series game. Note that all the cards designate him as a Cleveland Indian.

Brian

brianp-beme 08-30-2018 10:53 AM

And for a long time collector it is always a pleasure to see images of cards I have never seen before...thanks everyone!

Brian

rhettyeakley 08-30-2018 12:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by prewarsports (Post 1808871)
Just for discussion sake, what makes these "cards". The issuer was the photographer which essentially just makes them photographs. They were not issued in conjunction with products (like 19th century card/photos) from anything I have seen and other sets of photographs do not get the same respect and classification. If they were 5x7 or 8X10 they would certainly just be a set of photos yet other series of photographs like those from the American League Service Bureau (which are actually numbered like cards) would fall into this same category. I know they are small and look like traditional baseball cards, but they clearly were developed on a full sheet with essentially no borders and trimmed down by the photographer.

At their base root, these are tiny "type 3" photographs developed in composite form and trimmed then given away by a photo studio in Sacramento. I have no skin in the game and am not trying to be controversial at all, just curious why these are "cards" and other sets of superior photographs (off their original negatives) from studios are not? I would be interested in others thoughts and I am in NO WAY downplaying anyone's cards or collections.

Rhys

Rhys, although I have no evidence to say for sure but the size and nature of the cards would circumstantially indicate these were inserted in some sort of candy or gum product in California. The fact that they say Frederick Foto on front is just the photographer marking their images. Not all cards have the Frederick Foto on front (see Shore and Alexander in this thread). Those images may very well have been from a different source. The fact that we know these as Frederick Foto cards is only due to the fact we don’t know who actually “inserted” the cards into their product (that info is likely lost to time), had we been around in California in 1921 and seen who inserted them we would likely know them by a different name.

This isn’t unprecedented in the card world, for example we don’t 100% know who issued the 1913 Oakland Oaks team issue cards but the limited circumstantial evidence seems to indicate them being a Cardinet Candy Co issue, they likely faced pushback from the Zeenut makers (Collins Candy Co) as they had exclusive rights to PCL players images and the following season instead of making cards of hometown Oakland Oaks they made their more famous Texas Tommy issue featuring Major Leaguers from much further away from home.

RedsFan1941 08-30-2018 01:07 PM

i hope this doesn't ruin thanksgiving

prewarsports 08-30-2018 02:37 PM

All good. We already fight at Thanksgiving over football game anyways :)

I guarantee these were printed 8 to a full 8x10 double weight sheet of photo paper. The rough sizes of the cards, their composition as well as knowing how photos of the era were produced absolutely points to this. The photographer cut them up into equal sections as good as he could and that is how they were made and why they look the way they do. The thin side borders were because he laid them out to squeeze 4 images side by side to run length-wise across an 8x10 piece of photo paper and cut them after adding the name etc. The fact that only a few have the logo in the corner also helps this theory as those were almost certainly the corner images on the sheet before being cut up wheer photographers would put their marks. If they were issued with some type of product that would make sense to call them baseball cards, but all evidence including the back stamps indicate the photographer himself was a self promoter plugging his studio.

I dont care either way, I dont collect these, but absent evidence these were put into a product of some type, these are just as much "cards" as several other photo issues with finite checklists. My hunch is that IF the Frederick Photos were bigger and less baseball card looking, they would not be considered baseball cards, but to each his own.

What is and is not a baseball card will never have a definite answer, I am just speaking plainly as a photo guy here, and regardless of how these were issued, these are chopped up 8x10's used to promote a photo studio.

LincolnVT 08-30-2018 02:48 PM

FF Cards
 
Just about every "card" is chopped from a larger sheet.

rhettyeakley 08-30-2018 04:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RedsFan1941 (Post 1808916)
i hope this doesn't ruin thanksgiving

Lol, we are all good, we fight less than most sets of brothers do, but we certainly have our moments! :)

The only ones that have the stamp on back are the larger “proofs”, none of the small “cards” have been found with the studio stamp on back.

JLange 08-30-2018 08:27 PM

want list
 
Quote:

And it looks like JLange (hey Jlange) might need to add 3 more cards to his Mails want list?
Very cool cards. Want list updated accordingly!

prewarsports 08-30-2018 09:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by LincolnVT (Post 1808948)
Just about every "card" is chopped from a larger sheet.

Wow, ok. I have a red plastic car in my driveway that my kids cruise around on but if I take that to the DMV they wont call it car just because my kids do.

I will state a couple of observations from several decades as both a collector of cards and photography.

1. There is not one single other set of cards in the Standard Catalog that I am aware of that is a hand chopped piece of photography that has not one shred of evidence that it was issued in any product or was part of any promotion that is considered a baseball card.

2. There are numerous issues of photography that fit every parameter used to distinguish the Frederick Foto cards as "cards" (except for the cute card like size) that would never in a million years pass as baseball cards.

My question was all in the name of trying to get opinions from other educated collectors about the nuances of a popular and VERY valuable set of baseball cards, but it does not look like people really care so I will walk away and wish everyone a nice holiday weekend.

Leon 08-31-2018 11:48 AM

A Vote for them to be cards
 
The reason I consider them to be cards is highlighted.

Having handled a good amount of them they just have the feel and look of baseball cards. They are printed on thicker stock than a photo (from what I remember), have their names and or teams and there are multiple cards known of most players. Their cuts aren't much worse then E220!!

Quote:

Originally Posted by prewarsports (Post 1808946)
All good. We already fight at Thanksgiving over football game anyways :)

I guarantee these were printed 8 to a full 8x10 double weight sheet of photo paper. The rough sizes of the cards, their composition as well as knowing how photos of the era were produced absolutely points to this. The photographer cut them up into equal sections as good as he could and that is how they were made and why they look the way they do. The thin side borders were because he laid them out to squeeze 4 images side by side to run length-wise across an 8x10 piece of photo paper and cut them after adding the name etc. The fact that only a few have the logo in the corner also helps this theory as those were almost certainly the corner images on the sheet before being cut up wheer photographers would put their marks. If they were issued with some type of product that would make sense to call them baseball cards, but all evidence including the back stamps indicate the photographer himself was a self promoter plugging his studio.

I dont care either way, I dont collect these, but absent evidence these were put into a product of some type, these are just as much "cards" as several other photo issues with finite checklists. My hunch is that IF the Frederick Photos were bigger and less baseball card looking, they would not be considered baseball cards, but to each his own.

What is and is not a baseball card will never have a definite answer, I am just speaking plainly as a photo guy here, and regardless of how these were issued, these are chopped up 8x10's used to promote a photo studio.


LincolnVT 08-31-2018 02:42 PM

Common Card Value
 
Do people have thoughts on what the "going rate" for one of the Sacramento player cards might be in let's say VG condition? Was trying to look around at recent auction sales on line, but I'm not seeing much.

Thanks.

Ethan

brianp-beme 09-09-2018 01:10 AM

1 Attachment(s)
I spotted this one floating in the interweb air and thought I would share, because of the partial neighboring 'card'.

Brian

seattlerainiers 09-11-2018 08:55 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by brianp-beme (Post 1811377)
I spotted this one floating in the interweb air and thought I would share, because of the partial neighboring 'card'.

Brian

Heh!

My card and accompany article on the interweb. Some of you may enjoy the article. There are other visuals, including some Zees:

http://sportspressnw.com/2156392/201...00-hit-machine

BeanTown 09-12-2018 12:04 PM

Ethan, would love to see your Ruth posted here in this thread. Its a great "baseball" card and my second favorite Ruth behind the Baltimore News "baseball card".

LincolnVT 09-12-2018 12:17 PM

Frederick Foto Babe Ruth
 
Ok...I was holding off, but you have been pretty generous in showing me some of your treasures / hidden gems!

Quote:

Originally Posted by BeanTown (Post 1812284)
Ethan, would love to see your Ruth posted here in this thread. Its a great "baseball" card and my second favorite Ruth behind the Baltimore News "baseball" card.


LincolnVT 09-12-2018 12:19 PM

Frederick Photo Babe Ruth
 
1 Attachment(s)
Here is my SGC 20...

TUM301 09-12-2018 12:23 PM

Nice Ethan, The Babe as a Red Sox. Awesome !!

Bicem 09-12-2018 01:29 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BeanTown (Post 1812284)
Ethan, would love to see your Ruth posted here in this thread. Its a great "baseball" card and my second favorite Ruth behind the Baltimore News "baseball" card.


Why is baseball in quotes?

BeanTown 09-12-2018 04:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bicem (Post 1812302)
Why is baseball in quotes?

Emphasizing I look at it as a baseball card and not a photo. Not to get in a debate over it, but its my opinion. Great card Ethan and thanks for posting.

calvindog 09-12-2018 06:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bicem (Post 1812302)
Why is baseball in quotes?


Better.

Leon 09-13-2018 09:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BeanTown (Post 1812355)
Emphasizing I look at it as a baseball card and not a photo. Not to get in a debate over it, but its my opinion. Great card Ethan and thanks for posting.

I figured you put the wrong word in quotes. "Card" might have been better to use there. There is no question it's baseball.

edjs 09-13-2018 04:52 PM

1 Attachment(s)
Here's my 2 cents, I mean, 2 cards/photos.

yanksfan09 09-13-2018 05:13 PM

Keep these coming, really cool set! Love the Alexander, never saw that before!

SetBuilder 09-13-2018 05:22 PM

From an aesthetic perspective, these cards are hideous and unsightly. By the time these cards were printed, there were higher quality methods available to make better looking cards. It looks like this Frederick photo company chose the cheapest and lowest quality materials to make this set. Not sure what makes them so coveted other than their rarity.

BeanTown 09-13-2018 06:11 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SetBuilder (Post 1812597)
From an aesthetic perspective, these cards are hideous and unsightly. By the time these cards were printed, there were higher quality methods available to make better looking cards. It looks like this Frederick photo company chose the cheapest and lowest quality materials to make this set. Not sure what makes them so coveted other than their rarity.

Will you be working on the set now?

SetBuilder 09-13-2018 06:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by BeanTown (Post 1812610)
Will you be working on the set now?

No.

I don't want to offend anyone who has a lot of money invested in these ugly cards.

I'm sorry.


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