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#1
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: peter chao
Guys, |
#2
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Steve Murray
and it deserves an answer. |
#3
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: dennis
lots of stuff coming out of attics/basements and closets then. collectors and few if any investors. most if not all dealers were collectors. no grading companys because who cared the prices for cards were affordable for all. and there was an interest in new cards for almost all collectors!you actually looked forward to the new sets then. |
#4
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: barrysloate
Thanks Steve. The golden age for me was also the 1980's, and I even feel the 90's were equally exciting. |
#5
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Marc S.
Think of how much information has been dispersed to the hobby masses over the past 10 years, thanks to "finds", population reports, major auctions, the "coming out" of some secretive collections. |
#6
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Jim Dale
Man I wish I had never opened that last box of '75 minis back when I was 10. And there was that shoe box of these really old cards with guys on them no one ever heard of that my mom tossed out. They didn't really look like baseball cards you know? Wish I had that box back....think they were my uncles or something like that. (yes they were likely T206 cards - tossed out like trash ) |
#7
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: leon
I agree with Marc on this one...I think THIS is the golden age of collecting. Sure, we don't have many 15 cent T cards anymore but the variety and sources, compared to 20-30 yrs ago, must be like night and day. The internet has made it so much more accessible..Maybe not as fun...but maybe more fun too......regards |
#8
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Josh Adams
Does Golden Age necessarily have to relate to price of cards? |
#9
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Ed Ivey
I agree that Al Gore invented the Golden Age. |
#10
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: peter chao
The Golden Age for Collecting would include the price of cards as one of the factors to be weighed. However, there are other hobby factors to be taken into account. The comaraderie of collectors, the availability of cards, the honesty of hobbyists, etc. |
#11
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Paul S
I'm not really sure how the tern "Golden Era for Collecting" is defined; maybe a different interpretation for everyone. For me it was being a kid and being able to buy a pack of cards and be excited by the anticipation of who might be inside (this is era-independent, i.e., it happens in the era when you happen to be a kid.) If I was with a friend it was always, "Who'd ya get?" and "Get anyone good?" I also had, for me, a lot of "golden era" fun when I got a little older and could spend more on older items w/o breaking the bank. And now I am having alot of "current golden era" fun -- contradiction in terms there, I know -- since I've been on this board, although I am more dismayed by the pandemia of counterfeiting and misrepresentation than I am about the high prices. |
#12
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: peter chao
Paul S., |
#13
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: dennis
there was no internet but in the chicago area back in the early 80's there was about 6 different shows every weekend. you did not need the internet. i guess if you lived in a big city you were in luck. and remember most dealers only had vintage cards so anything could turn up.(and you could afford to buy it!) |
#14
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Paul S
Peter, that's the point. I haven't matured! |
#15
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: boxingcardman
and declare the last several years as the best ever. Think about the quality and breadth of material and the ease with which we have access to it. It is unparalleled. |
#16
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: jay behrens
The Golden Era has to be 1979-89. 1979 saw the advent of the Beckett price guide letting the average person know that those cards in attic were worth some money. It was also the first big boom in the hobby. Shows and shops were popping up all over the country and anyone with a Price Club membership could be a dealer with a huge modern inventory in the mid to late 80s. |
#17
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: barrysloate
It does depend how we define golden age. |
#18
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Scot Reader
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#19
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: jay behrens
The information may be better, but it's all very impersonal. How can this situation be better than going to a show, talking with other dealers and collectors and actually being able to look at and hold cards? |
#20
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Scot Reader
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#21
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Pcelli60
These are the "Golden" years..Prices not withstanding. Look at all that is at our fingertips. See how we bond electronically..The auction companies, big brother eBay. We all seem connected in a way that the 80's cant compare too.. |
#22
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Mike
1959 to 1966. Sitting around in the grass with my friends trading cards. Every guy I knew in grade school collected cards. Forget E bay, forget the national, forget the 2 Billion dollar Wagner card. Forget the trimmed and flattened crap, what I wouldn't give to be able to go back for a couple weeks, and just screw around with my buddies. To open that pack and see mantles face, that was awesome. |
#23
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Paul S
Mike, you must have lived down the block from me. |
#24
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: P SPAETH
I agree with Mike. Nothing will ever replicate the experience of walking to the variety and candy stores and buying and opening packs, or the anticipation of the next series coming out. |
#25
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: peter chao
My preference is a later period of time. During 1990-1999, I consider this the heyday for both card shows and hobby shops. I enjoyed walking up the aisle of a baseball card show and spotting cards that I needed for my collection. I liked shooting the breeze with the local dealer about the Giants and the A's. |
#26
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: dennis
wow peter i thought there were too many new baseball card products to keep track of in 1991! |
#27
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: jay behrens
It's kind of hard to call the present time a golden era. To call any time period a golden era requires some historical perspective, and we don't have that with the present day. |
#28
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Mike
My point is, at least for me, was the time when collecting was almost exclusively for kids. Adults weren't involved. Card shops weren't involved, it was only for us kids. The card collecting world was a place where us kids could go and just be kids. No adults. Adults knew nothing of cards, and that they were made for children. No Mr. Mint. No Al Hager. NO reprints. Just us kids with a show box full of cards. A nickel or a penny was all that it took. I understand the current state of affairs. I've spent many many thousands on cards. That is the way it is now. And I have no problem with what is going on now. I understand change. But for me, the most memorable time was when it was just me and my buddies. And never ever was the monetary value of a card brought up. Never. |
#29
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Scot Reader
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#30
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Mark L
Maybe there have always been a few people who knew everything about hundreds of vintage sets. But today more information is available to an amateur collector such as myself than ever before. From the point of view of what is generally known about t206's and what is starting to be generally known about M116's, M101's, etc., this is a relative golden age. |
#31
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: peter chao
There's no doubt that the internet has made hobby information much more available. But the downside of this era is the high prices and the fear of card tampering. |
#32
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: Mike
Thanks Scot. All of it was true. And boy do I miss it all ! |
#33
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The Golden Era For Collecting
Posted By: jay behrens
Although I there is no way I would consider the present to be the golden era of collecting, it is the golden era of altering cards and other sports items. |
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