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Erik, I guess this means yours is worth about five grand!
https://www.ebay.com/itm/33471001053...M65YQ&LH_BIN=1 |
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I think I was the main beneficiary of Keith's recent pennant find. Here are three of my favorites. The Keezer mini needed some repair, but I think I got it good enough for the wall using my 3rd grade craft skills. It's also kind of crazy how different the color of the Astros pennant looks depending on the lighting I used for the pic (sun vs. overhead lights).
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That's a nice repair job. Clearly you were better at arts and crafts in 3rd grade, then I am now. :-)
How did you do the patching? |
I put the new felt under the pennant, traced the hole shape with a pencil and then cut out the piece. Then had to tweak and adjust to get it to more or less fit. Then I glued it in place with fabritac glue. I wouldn't normally buy a pennant with such a hole, but it is rare and who knows when I'll get a chance to get a nice one.
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Speaking of that $3,900 sale last night, I can’t imagine that the seller would have done better with an auctioneer. With the buyer’s premium etc, it would have required the winner paying over $5K to bring the same reward.
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I like the buyer’s premium about as much as I like third party grading services. :mad:
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Making close to 40% for every lower end item and at least 20% for every upper tier item is a pretty good scam. Some auction companies are good people and really work for it and try to get you (and them) top dollar, but most just act like they’re too cool for school and wait to fleece the sheep. They act like they’re doing you a favor selling the item. Auction companies ruined the show market and to me, along with grading, ruined the fun of the hobby.
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Haha - investing in FTX seems to be a better investment than Angels pennants [emoji1750] Although, I’m interested in what this gentleman will actually get for his. |
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Good pickups and patchwork, Marc! Looks really nice! |
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I do love that period artwork. This particular pennant/logo always reminds me of growing up in the early 80’s as my folks took me and my brother from campground to campground - thanks Good Sam Camping Club… probably why I wanted to sell most of my Angels pennants tbh [emoji23] https://uploads.tapatalk-cdn.com/202...196a843ff7.jpg |
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I know these pennants are rather new for this forum (and it may be too much football all at once), but I thought some of you may find them interesting. I won the Ronnie Lott on ebay last week. I collect 49ers pennants, but never even knew that this existed. I had seen the Montana before in a collection, but never for sale. I did a bunch of searching through worthpoint and came up with the following examples. All seem to be very, very rare, with each having, at most, two sales. They all say "1982 NFL Properties" on them.
I'm curious to know if anyone has any of these, if there are other players, etc. I've also wondered if the 1982 strike somehow kept them off the market. I also want Kyle to decide that he needs to figure out who made them and how they were sold. NFL properties did have catalogs and I have seen a sale for a 1982 catalog, but can't find one to look through. I know that Kyle already posted about the player pennants from later in 90s. Those are common. These are something different. |
The Ronnie Lott font screams “1980’s!” I’m thinking REO Speedwagon or Journey. :p
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Coincidentally, I had the 1982 catalog Mark referenced but they aren't included anywhere within the 159 page book. I'm probably the only other person here interested enough to notice but there are subtle design differences in these pennants that make me wonder if these were maybe prototypes or samples. They are so rare they couldn't have been widely marketed. Joe Ferguson and Harvey Martin seem like odd choices for a pennant series when there's no evidence of a Tony Dorsett, Walter Payton, Earl Campbell, Lawrence Taylor, Dan Fouts or any other bigger star of the early 80s. The Too Tall and Harvey Martin each sold for over $130 in 2010, so somebody recognized their rarity. Lastly, how bleak has eBay become that I'm this intrigued by 1980s pennants? I guess the vintage needle is moving for me. |
I’ve had three people contact me about the 1954 NY Giants pennant on ebay. It’s a fantasy and not a repro of anything that actually exists. The seller dropped the opening bid from $525 to $200, so I think he knows but isn’t disclaiming.
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I don’t know of a vintage pennant with any text or date on the spine (besides the grommet pennants which have a fake spine). |
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Speaking of repros I grabbed these the other day because they were very cheap (even by repro standards). These are cool designs IMO
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BF3 premiums
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Those are all repros of 1936-7 BF3 felt premiums
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Unsolicited Pennant Life Hack:
If you display in rigid holders, trim them to fit the pennant. As you know, many from the 40s and 50s are only 26” or 27” long. Notable the “sliding runner” company pennants. They always look weird in the bigger holder and they are also hard to keep centered. So get them in as deep as possible, then cut off the empty 3” or so off the side end. You need a file to cut through the edges but the plastic part cuts like butter with a guillotine paper cutter. They fit perfectly as the dimensions are almost a perfect proportional match to the holder. I do the same with the 3/4 sizes which are roughly 8” by 26”, although you need to cut off an edge and close with invisible tape (best to use is gift wrapping tape). |
Interesting eBay experience
Couple months ago: eBay seller had a cool pennant for auction with a “make offer” option. I saw it early, made offer, he accepted, paid immediately. Sale confirmed.
A half hour later, sale cancelled. Exact same pennant now being auctioned. Starting bid of $0.99. Pictured on a round white table. |
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“Read this listing it is 100% accurate. I have over $100,00 of t-206 to 1956 Topps PSA cards. And autograph of Baseball legends. I know the collection industry. Enough said.” |
What a joke. Anyone with a brain can tell in a split second that the "1954 Giants Pennant" is a fake. And there's a bid on it, no less. :confused:
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In the old days of ebay, we’d be able to reach out to the buyer who’s about to get duped. |
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Or will you not deal with the new seller? |
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Somebody posted this as a 1915 Red Sox pennant. I'm a card guy, not a pennant guy. Can anybody help with this one?
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