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-   -   E90-1 "shaded" back variations? (http://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=120845)

ubiqty 02-19-2010 12:39 PM

I just looked at 16 new e90-1 cards I recently acquired and only the Phelps has the shading you are looking for. I'll check my others and respond back over the weekend.
Thanks,
Scott (ubiqty)

caramelcard 02-19-2010 12:48 PM

"It was mentioned that the only one of the cards that Robert showed in a previous post was the shaded variation...however those other two cards have areas in the border where there is some shading. "

Thanks Brian. That's what I tried to highlight with my post.

I have a few dozen that have no shading at all or maybe a touch here and there and then those three.

This is a neat printing gaffe and we might be able to pin it down to only several, specific cards that have the problem. I'm not sure it needs to be recognized in the SCD, but I'm glad that Scott pointed it out and that we were able to discuss it.

Rob

ScottFandango 02-20-2010 06:24 AM

Barry,
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by barrysloate (Post 783904)
To me this is just a little extra black ink bleeding into the design.

Look at Scott's example in post #46. Many of the letters, both at the top and bottom, have some loops with shaded areas and others which remain white. Could that be a variation? Was that deliberately designed by the artist? Doesn't make sense to me.


why does have a variation HAVE TO BE DELIBERATE?

it was a mistake at the Press, i know that, they were never intended to be different....

BUT, it only shows up on specific cards, and it is not common...

if it happened only once, or it wasnt predictable, then it means nothing....

BUT ITS PREDICTABLE WHAT CARDS HAVE THIS...


PS....NO CARD, even the SHADED version, have ALL of the areas shaded...they have areas (especially the left border) that usually remains clear...


it must have been an older plate that was worn down, thus the spots that were meant NOT to have any ink, got some....BUT again, this doesnt happen in all the cards, and proves that some were created at different times (separate print run)...

we all know this set was made for a few years and nobody knows the series breakdown....

this could be the first step in deciphering a specific series print run within the set!!!

if this is predictable, no matter what you call it, why cant it be recognized?

wish Rich Klein would chime in (mr errors and variations)

Brian, your on the right track!

barrysloate 02-20-2010 07:01 AM

Scott- it doesn't have to be deliberate, I was just pointing out it was an inadvertent error that was caused by a little ink bleeding. As such, it doesn't strike me as a variation. But that is one area of the hobby where we have vastly different opinions.

To me, the Magie misspelling is a variation, the while the Nodgrass is not. The printers designed a new plate to correct the Magie error; while the Nodgrass was a result of a small foreign substance lodging itself on the plate during the print run. But I know the hobby considers the Nodgrass a bona fide variation.

ShoelessBob 02-20-2010 10:44 AM

Must have been erased
 
Darn...I think I this was one of the "Shaded" variations but somehow it got erased. :D

<a href="http://s231.photobucket.com/albums/ee219/sportsfever1/?action=view&current=IMG_0691.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i231.photobucket.com/albums/ee219/sportsfever1/IMG_0691.jpg" border="0" alt="Photobucket"></a>

<a href="http://s231.photobucket.com/albums/ee219/sportsfever1/?action=view&current=IMG_0689.jpg" target="_blank"><img src="http://i231.photobucket.com/albums/ee219/sportsfever1/IMG_0689.jpg" border="0" alt="Photobucket"></a>

brianp-beme 02-20-2010 10:54 AM

Grading (first or second, possibly kindergarten)
 
Typical grading company blunder...that Bridwell pose (as seen with blank back in previous post) does not exist in the E90-1 set. E92 Dockman is a probable contender.

Brian

ShoelessBob 02-20-2010 11:09 AM

Wow
 
Thanks Brian!

I did not realize this was an e92 Dockman. Would it be worthwhile to get re-graded?

sreader3 02-20-2010 11:12 AM

Bob,

I have just two E90-1s [Joss (Portrait), Wallace]--and no shading.

Scot

brianp-beme 02-20-2010 11:51 AM

Problem
 
Not to throw off the E90-1 discussion, but to answer the question on the blank back card...the problem is, this card could E92 Dockman, E92 Nadja, E92Croft's Cocoa, E92 Croft's Candy, E101, E105 (although if it were E105 it would be much thinner stock, and thus easier to pin down), or possibly E106(not sure which Bridwell pose is in E106).

The bigger error that the grading companies continue to perpetuate is their need to designate blank cards such as these as coming from a particular issue, when, because of shared poses between different sets, they can not be accurately pinned down. The vast majority of M101-4 and M101-5, and their associated sets that share designs and photos, as well as the M135 and associated sets are also examples of this (recently saw 'Boston Store' blank backs--how can they know?) haphazard designation by the grading companies.

Brian

Leon 02-20-2010 12:06 PM

standardization on blank backs
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by brianp-beme (Post 784187)
Not to throw off the E90-1 discussion, but to answer the question on the blank back card...the problem is, this card could E92 Dockman, E92 Nadja, E92Croft's Cocoa, E92 Croft's Candy, E101, E105 (although if it were E105 it would be much thinner stock, and thus easier to pin down), or possibly E106(not sure which Bridwell pose is in E106).

The bigger error that the grading companies continue to perpetuate is their need to designate blank cards such as these as coming from a particular issue, when, because of shared poses between different sets, they can not be accurately pinned down. The vast majority of M101-4 and M101-5, and their associated sets that share designs and photos, as well as the M135 and associated sets are also examples of this (recently saw 'Boston Store' blank backs--how can they know?) haphazard designation by the grading companies.

Brian

I agree Brian. There is no way the TPG's can know which series many blank backed cards came from. The way I classify them, and a way that is at least standard, is to go to the least common denominator of ACC numbers. In other words if there is a blank backed T206 then I would use it instead of a series with a higher number, same thing on the E cards. If an E card has a blank back, and the front was in the E90-1 series, then that is what I use. It's at least a consistent system and one I would propose to always be used, again, for consistency. regards

ps...with regards to the original question I don't think these shading errors should be documented as true errors but as small print defects....or differences

caramelcard 02-20-2010 12:29 PM

Scott,

You're right. If the shading did tell us something about the production dates or shed light on the issue in any significant way, then this would be important.

So, what does it tell us?

I agree that a variation is something that was intentional, but it doesn't matter if this is a variation or not if it reveals something about the set.

Have you been able to identify any patterns? Have you found more than one example of the same player with the shading?

Rob

JamesGallo 02-20-2010 08:54 PM

Well I checked over 50 different E90 cards and none of them were shaded. That being said unless they can be pinned down to a specific group then I think it was a dirty plate or something like that.

James G

ScottFandango 02-21-2010 06:45 AM

James
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by JamesGallo (Post 784349)
Well I checked over 50 different E90 cards and none of them were shaded. That being said unless they can be pinned down to a specific group then I think it was a dirty plate or something like that.

James G


That is my point, it can be predicted which cards have this shading....

for instance, all of the "common" cards have no shaded version....

if you see the card on Ebay, its probably not shaded...

the sHADED cards all are Lower Population cards...

this is very Significant in my book....

so dont even look at the H Jennings, the SUmmers, Tinker, Lajoie, Baker, Mathewson, Young, wallace, crawford, j jackson, chase etc....these "commons" dont have shaded versions...

ScottFandango 02-21-2010 07:00 AM

Rob,
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by caramelcard (Post 784194)
Scott,

You're right. If the shading did tell us something about the production dates or shed light on the issue in any significant way, then this would be important.

So, what does it tell us?

I agree that a variation is something that was intentional, but it doesn't matter if this is a variation or not if it reveals something about the set.

Have you been able to identify any patterns? Have you found more than one example of the same player with the shading?

Rob

yes and yes...

ScottFandango 02-21-2010 07:09 AM

clarification
 
is it a "variation" if one players cards predictably comes in both shaded and non-shaded versions?

for instance, when a player has a shaded version, they also have a normal version....

if the player ONLY had a shaded version, then this would have no significance..

but when you can hold 2 cards of the same player next to each other, and one back is shaded and the other is normal, this has significance....

Again, if EVERY card in the set had a shaded and regular version, it would have no significance...BUT not every card does!

edhans 02-22-2010 06:29 AM

Re: E90-1 "shaded" back variations?
 
I looked at each of my 99 E90-1s (93 diff, 6 dupes). Found only two with the shading, both Fromme. The shading is not identical on the cards. The other Cincinnati players (Mitchell, Bescher, and 2 Siegle's) do not have the shading. I'm inclined to agree with the majority that it's not a variation, just a dirty or worn plate. As Scott points out though, if we could establish definitive patterns it might help to solve the elusive mystery of e90-1s series.

ScottFandango 02-23-2010 06:26 AM

fromme
 
confirmed here also...

Fromme is one!

not a dirty plate, but a DIFFERENT plate....

a dirty plate would leave smudges on the inside AND outside of the lines...

no smudges are found on the shaded variation...in fact they are quite "clean"

ScottFandango 02-23-2010 06:45 AM

im stealing this from the great Ted Z
 
"Discovery consists of seeing what everybody has seen, and thinking what nobody has thought." --Albert Szent-Gyorgi

thanks Ted for this quote that puts things in perspective..

bijoem 02-23-2010 06:50 AM

scott - there are a many ways this could happen on press through poor quality control..... or simply during the initial setup (make-ready) for the run.

for instance.... all one has to do is run too much black ink (or not enough water) and you will achieve that plugging in (you call it shading). If a pressman saw that the black was running heavy, he would have adjusted and kept running. What you see is the bad printing that was fixed.

This is not a variation.

no matter if is on just one card, some cards, or all cards - this is a print defect..... as the issue can happen on the entire sheet or on a specific part of the sheet.


As far as printing plates....
and your mentioning "DIFFERENT" plate....
I mentioned this before -

Printing plates only have so many impressions in them.
I don't know the number of sheets that could be run off by a plate in 1910ish.... but I would bet it wasn't more than 10,000 sheets - probably less.

To compensate for the short life span of printing plates - multiples of the same printing plate are produced.

So.... for just about any mainstream card we collect - - there were MANY plates created for the same card. As plates outlived their usefulness, a pressman would take off the bad plates and put on the new (but same) plates.

ScottFandango 02-23-2010 07:00 AM

Joe
 
so i will use the word VERSION instead

SHADED VERSION....


only certain cards have the shaded Version....


better?

bijoem 02-23-2010 07:07 AM

Scott....

I think the thread is awesome.

And I love the observation.


you really could call this anything you want.

I was just trying to be a constructive participant of the thread.

ScottFandango 02-23-2010 07:15 AM

joe
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by bijoem (Post 784896)
Scott....

I think the thread is awesome.

And I love the observation.


you really could call this anything you want.

I was just trying to be a constructive participant of the thread.

i appreciate it! you are the expert on printing and this discussion is great!



how about this....some cards have a Regular version and a shaded version....is that not true?

ScottFandango 02-23-2010 07:18 AM

joe
 
How come then, say the Fromme, has regular versions and shaded versions, BUT NOTHING IN BETWEEN...

wouldnt it be a slow progression from clean to dirty? havent found that... I havent seen any Frommes that have "just a bit if shading"..has anyone?>

ScottFandango 02-23-2010 07:25 AM

sorry for back to back to back posts....
 
The Mystery of the E90-1 Series' is how i found the shaded versions...

for 100 years, nobody knows what E90-1 cards were made in 1909 versus 1911....i have been trying to find details that may give us clues...

this may be the first CONCRETE evidence for a specific series.....

trying to think why it happened is the wrong direction to go....

thinking of what we have in front of us , and what it tells us, is the right direction

bijoem 02-23-2010 07:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ScottFandango (Post 784901)
How come then, say the Fromme, has regular versions and shaded versions, BUT NOTHING IN BETWEEN...

wouldnt it be a slow progression from clean to dirty? havent found that... I havent seen any Frommes that have "just a bit if shading"..has anyone?>


It would not have to be a progression from clean to dirty.

You may find varying degrees of shading, but it is not necessary that you do.

Also - I am guessing after the pressman noticed the bad sheets, he thumbed down the lift and threw out the bad sheets. He may not have grabbed all of them - so we are left with some bad sheets that found their way into cutting and distribution.

Its all just guessing.

I have no idea what the quality control was at the print shop.

bijoem 02-23-2010 07:30 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ScottFandango (Post 784903)
this may be the first CONCRETE evidence for a specific series.....


that is cool stuff - and I would guess looking through print defects / oddities / and miscuts one could start putting a puzzle together.

steve B 02-23-2010 07:43 PM

Very cool stuff and fascinating too. A few thoughts now that we're a bit into this.

I guessed earlier that the shaded ones were from a late print run, where maybe they cut corners and didn't clean or replace the plates. I'm still leaning towards this. Especially if all the shaded ones are cards that are harder to find.

So what's the list of shaded cards? Does it match with the list Brian had?
There were 16 there, which is a nice number for a sheet, but doesn't divide into the 120 card set all that well. 12 or 24 works better. The list had a few that are shown in the 2010 standard catalog as being commons, but I know of at least one mistake on that list.

I think in that era they would have used actual stones rather than plates. The stones lasted a bit longer if I recall things properly.

And like Joe D said, a dry stone or plate would give the shading effect just like a worn plate. I think the dry stone/plate is more likely. All the shading is in small areas that the water would evaporate from more quickly.

Steve B

ubiqty 02-24-2010 10:37 AM

I went through all of my 117 e90-1 cards and the only ones with shaded areas as you are looking for are Phelps (posted earlier) and Tenney.
Thanks,
Scott.

ScottFandango 02-24-2010 11:53 AM

ubiqty
 
thanks for checking!

those 2 are confirmed!

judsonhamlin 02-24-2010 03:48 PM

In looking through my 67 E90-1's (finally), the only two that are convincingly shaded (most obvious in the baseball) are Irwin and Schlitzer. I also noted what appear to be minor variances in the lettering of "BASEBALL SERIES" across the top of the card.

ScottFandango 02-24-2010 06:59 PM

Michael,
 
Quote:

Originally Posted by sox1903wschamp (Post 783838)
Not a back guy but for what it is worth, I agree with this point. I checked my Boston AL team set and this one is kind of the only one I see with some shade.


is that the back of Schlitzer?

ScottFandango 05-13-2011 07:50 PM

revisiting
 
Bob, is it a coincidence that out of the 300 E90-1 cards for sale on ebay right now, there are ZERO Shaded back variation cards for sale...

there are no R Marquard, J sheckard, R demmitt, Tenney, H wagner batting (ALL SIMILAR RED BACKGROUNDS) for sale!

there are no Bob green , hooks wiltse, Froome, Roy Thomas (all Blue green with mountains) for sale!

this is no coincidence....it is because these shaded back cards were one of (if not the last) series produced for the E90-1 series (also the rarest)..

you cannot call it a "printing error or defect" if it only appears in certain cards, that happen to be the "tougher" cards also....it would be a "random printing error" IF it occured in ALL or MOST cards, which it in fact DOESNT....IT NEVER IS SEEN IN THE COMMON CARDS....again, It IS NEVER SEEN In The ComMon Cards!!

so, it may appear on the surface (no pun intended) that this "shaded back" variation that I discovered is a printing mistake, but in fact it reveals one of the more rare print runs that occured between 1909-1911....just use the cards for sale at this very moment as a hint....

especially fun is if you line these "shaded variations" up next to eachother, they all look very similar, YET look AMAZINGLY different to the rest of the set!

Enjoy this 100 year old discovery, a gift from me to the collecting World!

fkw 05-14-2011 11:31 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Leon (Post 784189)
I agree Brian. There is no way the TPG's can know which series many blank backed cards came from. The way I classify them, and a way that is at least standard, is to go to the least common denominator of ACC numbers. In other words if there is a blank backed T206 then I would use it instead of a series with a higher number, same thing on the E cards. If an E card has a blank back, and the front was in the E90-1 series, then that is what I use. It's at least a consistent system and one I would propose to always be used, again, for consistency. regards

ps...with regards to the original question I don't think these shading errors should be documented as true errors but as small print defects....or differences


wish they would have put E90-1 on this blank back McLean :) ......the E90-1 McLean is one of the toughest in the set (high book is $5,000).
IMO all the blank backed cards like these are E92s, even though this could be a E101 as well :)
http://centuryoldcards.com/images/19...cleansgc10.jpg

edhans 05-14-2011 11:58 AM

Re: revisiting
 
Scott,
I applaud you for your research and effort, but I strongly disagree with your conclusions. Some of the "confirmed" subjects with the shading are common E90-1s; In particular Keeler (pink), Wagner (bat), Harry Davis, and Miller. In fact none of the cards mentioned should be considered among E90-1s rarest. Until we find a Mitchell (Cin), Walsh, Duffy, Shean, etc. we can't conclude that only the rarest (last series) of E90-1s were printed with this "variation". It is incredibly unlikely that the 28 or so subjects mentioned in this thread were printed on the same sheet. For instance, I believe G. Davis to be a card which was discontinued early and Willis obviously a much later issue (note the trade during the off season after 1909). No way they were printed on the same sheet. I'm inclined to agree with those who suggest that this is just a printing anomaly that occurred on multiple sheets.

ScottFandango 05-14-2011 02:51 PM

" Ed you said "in now way were these printed on the same sheet.." why are you so sure about this?

wouldnt the artists and American Caramel Printing executives use one artist (and therefore noticably simialr styles)

the RED background cards with the shading all look VERY Similar, and are dfiferent than anyting else in the set...why assume these similar cards (sheckard, marquard, wagner batting, demmitt, tenney) were printed in different print runs....to me is seems obvious (and intuitive) that they would have all been made at the same time (also the color red is very VERY similar in all these)

i think we need to step back and take a look at the artwork and background color of this set...it may reveal more than you think....

hint hint...all the know rarities have a textured colored background not found in any other cards , again suggesting simialr style and colored cards were made together.

edhans 05-14-2011 03:23 PM

Re: revisiting
 
To a certain extent, the styles play a role in the "series" of E90-1. There are several other variables that are more important. I think the same artist was responsible for most of the artwork. It doesn't necessarily follow (and can't possibly be) that all of his work was released all at once.

I'm not sure what you mean by "textured colored background", but I again disagree with the contention that background colors found on the rarities can't be found on commons. I'll cite just the two examples that come quickly to mind: Duffy/Chase (and several others) and Walsh/Dygert. There are others.

Of course, I'm not certain about the G. Davis and Willis cards. One really can't be certain about most things regarding E90-1. But an examination of their playing records make it very unlikely that they were produced at the same time.

On the surface of it, the five cards you mention could have been printed on the same sheet. But how then do we account for the discrepancy in rarity? Demmitt and Tenney are significantly more difficult than Marquard and Sheckard and miles tougher than Wagner (batting).

ScottFandango 05-14-2011 06:25 PM

ED
 
marquard and wagner may be more available because they are HOF's..but those red cards i feel, have the same degree of toughness....

why arent there any SHADED backs for sale out of the 300 on ebay?

as for the rare card TEXTURED background..i think its very easy to see....use the peaches graham as an example, also the bemis, ed walsh, gibson back view, and Mclean, although different colors, they all have the same (speckled/textured background)...its clearly different than the other 100 or so cards....scans would help i guess..

the lobert also shows this textured/stippled/speckled style

edhans 05-14-2011 07:16 PM

Re: revisiting
 
No way Tenney and Demmitt are as common as Wagner and Marquard. The ratio is probably something like 10:1.

There aren't any shaded backs on ebay because they're scarce. That doesn't mean that any card with a shaded back is a difficult subject. The four examples I cited in an earlier post are proof of that. None of the cards "confirmed" in this thread Are among the most difficult in the set. And several, most notably the Keeler (pink) are rather common.

Now I understand what you mean by "textured". I refer to them in today's modern terminology as "pixilated". Those subjects include Mitchell (Cin), Sweeney (Bos), Graham, Gibson (back), Young (Cle), Duffy, and a few others I'm sure. Interestingly, there are cards from other series done in this same style; notably E92 Collins and E90-3 Schulte. Bemis, Walsh and McLean are not examples of this style. And yes, all of the above E90-1s are quite scarce.

ScottFandango 05-14-2011 07:30 PM

ed
 
looking at my walsh noww and it looks pixilated to me...just like the peaches....the light yellow makes it more difficult to see however....

we are getting somewhere now....im telling you. al the raritites in this set have textured backgrounds that are very different from all the other cards ...that is the biggest hint that art style and ink color/tone means something...add in the fact that some have rare shaded backs, and it even makes more sense

wrapperguy 05-14-2011 07:36 PM

better late
 
Was not interested in this thread when it came out last year but have since begun collecting the set and am only a few cards away. Cards with shading are Butler, G. Davis, Fromme, Irwin, Miller, Richie, Schlitzer, Scheckard, and Thomas batting. Will leave it up to the scholars to determine any significance.

ScottFandango 05-14-2011 07:46 PM

ebay hasnt seen a roy thomas batting in 4 months...

a sneaky tough card...

ScottFandango 05-14-2011 07:48 PM

G davis, pink keeler, and irwin i would like to see scans if you could.... all others u mentioned i agree and have example myself...

again, whenever a card is seen in a shaded version, it ALWAYS is seen also as a clean regular version....but interestingly BOTH versions are tough....

i stand by my assessment that no shaded versions are found in a COMMON card....

hint hint....LOOK FOR CARDS WITH MOUNTAINS IN THE BACK...that was an artistic touch that was added later to add more drama to these cards......interestingly, there are very few if any MOUNTAINS in T206 cards.....


E90-1 backgrounds blow away T206 backgrounds!

might the E90-1 American Caramel set have the most diverse, colorful, unique and interesting collection of backgrounds of any pre war set?????

ScottFandango 05-15-2011 05:11 AM

ed,
 
you said "Some of the "confirmed" subjects with the shading are common E90-1s; In particular Keeler (pink), Wagner (bat), Harry Davis, and Miller"------- NONE of these are CONFIRMED BY ME or anyone else..it was posted these had a "touch" of shading which is not the same...

just went over this entire thread, i see no evidence of Keeler Pink or davis shaded...

Brian made a post on page 3 were he listed some of his cards that had a "touch" of shading...the keeler pink was listed there....this does not mean it is a variation....

ED, what cards do you think CANT be shaded version because they were too common?

Just curious, thanks for your response!

ScottFandango 05-15-2011 05:31 AM

Pop Report check reveals more!
 
just checked the PSA pop report again,and it sure confirms the shaded versions!

cards found with shaded version

group A (solid red background, action posses )

Richie 10 on the Pop report, yes only 10!!!
Sheckard 11
Tenney 11
Demmitt 11
Pastorius 12
Marquard HOF 22
Wagner batting HOF 28

amazingly similar pop reports!!!! shows how rare and tough these cards are ...raise your hand if you are surprised to see the pop reorts on these are less than those listed rarities below!!!!

as a comparative reference to KNOWN rarities:

mike mitchell 18
peaches graham 18
larry mclean 11
hans lobert 12
ed walsh 20
H duffy 16

(joe jackson 58)

my discovery may change the way we look at E90-1 RARITIES...[Peaches graham are so numerous, i need a RICHIE! POP 10..and maybe i can get a shaded version Richie!! POP 3]
this is fun!

ScottFandango 05-15-2011 05:37 AM

and
 
Confirmed Group B (Blue and green background with mountains)

roy thomas 14 pop only!!!!
wiltse 15
froome 17
schlitzer 14
camnitz 16
groom 13

Again all VERY SIMILAR POP NUMBERS that are far less than the COMMONS which many have over double and triple the amount of graded examples....

If one of these shaded cards in groups A or B had a POP report dissimilar to the others, then that could blow a hole in the theory...BUT since they have uncanningly similar POP reports, it supports my theory.....


comparative pop reports:
summers 43
Bailey 36
f clarke 42
h howell 39
mullin 38
hartzell 34
sweeney 36
criger 32

HOF's
Cobb 114
Lajoie 54
wallace 52
joss portrait 59
bender 44
HR baker 58
jennings 57
mathewson 66
cy Young 55

ED, i dont agree with your assessment that Wagner batting or marquard are "common" ...they have half the amount of graded cards of most other HOF in this set (1/3 less than many)...they are actually 2 of the rarest (POP wise) HOFs found in this set! Known HOF toughies Tris speaker has pop report of 14, and Cy Young Cleveland has 16 POP report...so POP 22 is in the ballbark of these known HOF rarities!!!!

in this set, HOFers are graded about twice as often as a similar non HOF counterpart...this appears true on the POP report and on the Group A shaded cards (wagner and marquard have almost exactly double the graded version of sheckard, demmitt, tenney, pastorius)

it all makes perfect sense !!
wow im having fun!
can anyone join me?

Ladder7 05-15-2011 07:07 AM

A few Hof's here. None shaded.

Question for Scott., Have you tried decaf?

ScottFandango 01-09-2012 01:10 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bob Lemke (Post 783467)
I think to confirm their status as true variations, we need to see more than one "shaded" example for one or more of those that are now known.

I know that would be easier with a more commonly encountered set, but surely there are enough E90-1s out there to confirm or disprove this theory.



Ok Bob, i have obtained mutliple examples of the same card with shading on the back...

challenge to the board: if its a random printing error than surely someone would have a shaded version OF A COMMON CARD FROM THIS SET...

Please , anyone, show me a common card with shading, because in 4 years of searching, i cant find a common with shading.....interesting no?

ScottFandango 09-12-2012 03:11 PM

decaf
 
i now drink decaf!

i still love this topic though!


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