Net54baseball.com Forums

Net54baseball.com Forums (http://www.net54baseball.com/index.php)
-   Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions (http://www.net54baseball.com/forumdisplay.php?f=2)
-   -   Cards that met their demise... (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=65068)

Archive 04-30-2004 12:38 PM

Cards that met their demise...
 
Posted By: <b>Nickinvegas</b><p>A few weeks ago I went to a show and purchased an EXMint 62' Mantle and a few other star cards and put them in my shirt pocket. Unfortunataly I forgot to take them out and my wife who would sooner die then have something out of place took the shirt straight to the washing machine. I explained to her how this card managed to stay in great shape for over 40 years and spent only 40 minutes in our house and it was mangled. <BR><BR>This got me thinking of other cards that have met their demise in my hands. I take great care in handling my cards, but a few events have been out of my hands. Here is a short list of the victims:<BR><BR>CARD Cause of Death<BR>T206 Cy Young(hand shows) Teething(1st child)<BR>1958 Orland Cepeda(was NM+) Dinged corner placing in holder<BR>1956 Clemente(ExMNT) Wind gust while photographing outside<BR>1984 Fleer Matingly(Mint) Dropped and dinged corner<BR><BR>I am sure I am responsible for a few more...<BR><BR><BR>Nick

Archive 04-30-2004 12:54 PM

Cards that met their demise...
 
Posted By: <b>t-206collector</b><p>That's a surprising string of irresponsible card handling you got there. I too have been vexed by irony behind lightly knicking a card's corner while trying to preserve it in a toploader. The only really bad gaffe I ever really had, however, involved a Frank Thomas 1990 Leaf Rookie in a screwdown holder, when it was worth about $75.00. A friend of the family came over and their 5 year old son wanted to see my card collection, which again, at the time, was more modern and less vintage. I opened up the cabinet where the Thomas was sitting and without my being able to get a word out, the kid raked his hands over my entire collection and flung the Thomas across the room. Upon hitting the floor, the card slipped halfway out of the screwdown holder and damaged a corner. I was so angry, but I had to be polite to the kid and his family.<BR>

Archive 04-30-2004 02:46 PM

Cards that met their demise...
 
Posted By: <b>Chris</b><p>Las year I went to visit my girlfriend who lives about 1/2 block from Wrigley Field. Sometime between the beginning and end of a Cubs/Reds game someone broke into my car and stole a T205 Tris Speaker and a shirt(?). They left a very valuable stereo system, but went for a card i had hidden (or so I thought) in a piece of cardboard under the floor mat. I was reminded why I am a Cards fan who views Wrigley field as a giant urinal again that day.. <img src="/images/happy.gif" height=14 width=14>

Archive 04-30-2004 04:16 PM

Cards that met their demise...
 
Posted By: <b>Dan Elsass</b><p>Well, hate to bring up ex-wife stories but... I will first premise this message with saying that she did NOT get what I had in my safe deposit boxes (all of my Vintage cards), Thank God she was never on the access list to get to them! However, the down side to this story is that I did lose my entire "home" collection while on a Submarine deployment back in 1989. She decided that 3 months was just too long to wait for her husband to come home, so she decided to leave. She sold all of my cards for a couple hundred bucks to some card shop in Charleston, SC for her U-haul money. What I lost, besides a great dog, complete baseball sets from 1963 to 1975, complete football sets from 1969 to 1975 and a few other tough sets plus tons and tons of rookies and stars from that era. <BR><BR>I have never really gotten back in to collecting those years of cards because it makes me miss my dog so damn much.

Archive 05-01-2004 03:14 PM

Cards that met their demise...
 
Posted By: <b>BillyB</b><p>LOL!

Archive 05-01-2004 05:09 PM

Cards that met their demise...
 
Posted By: <b>Julie</b><p>with my stupidity...<BR><BR>It was the first 19th century photo I ever had...I decided to open it on the bus. Go figure. I jerked a string to hard. "Oh dear--i hope i didn't dent it," I thought. I didn't; I tore it completely in two.<BR><BR>A very nice east coast photo restorer fixed it for me for $300, but we agreed that no new materials should be used except glue, so the tear still shows--besides i wouldn't want to fake an old photo back into great condition.<BR><BR>I almost wish someone HAD stolen it!


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 10:31 PM.