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Another trinket but I couldn't resist this Spring Training snap shot of Murtaugh:D
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1895 Hughie Jennings mounted photo
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Picked this up last night
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Brad
I was hoping that Jennings would stay cheap so my opening bid would hold up, but glad you won it, its one of his best photos I have ever seen and was a good deal. The stuff I really want ends tonight so now I have some extra money to work with! Congrats Rhys |
Thanks Rhys,
I thought it was going to go for actually quite a bit more than it did. But I was like I'll toss out one more bid and then go to bed and ended up surprised that it held. lol. I'm interested in seeing it since the photo is mounted on board in seems like its almost postcard size. I'm not a huge collector of 19th century stuff but when things pop up that seem interesting I'll pull the trigger. So now I have this and my 1885 Chicago White Stockings imperial cabinet. Good luck with your stuff tonight. Take care, Brad |
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Thanks Greg!
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Nice pickup Michael
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Nice pickup Michael.
Looks like your cooper item was used to create 1906 PC792 Embossed "Batter & Catcher" Baseball Postcard. Patrick |
Thanks so much for the match up of that postcard!!:) Can you guess the next item on my want list? ;)
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Rick |
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There is no doubt that teams no-longer printing tickets is going to make collecting my theme extremely challenging moving forward. It's really sad because it eventually will lead to the death of collecting a theme like this. When this happens I've come to the conclusion that I will have to focus my collecting to only vintage tickets. Re; your question, each scenario has its own unique set of challenges. In the good old days, fans didn't frequently save their tickets because they were often viewed as yesterday's trash and were tossed. To add to this, WWII saw paper items of all types disappear due to the war effort. Finding vintage tickets is a bit like finding a needle in a haystack (as I know you're aware of) since you collect Koufax tickets. For this reason I believe that vintage tickets will always have value because of limited supply and increasing demand. The amount of baseball ticket collectors in the hobby has increased dramatically since 1998 and vintage tickets, like other memorabilia, still rules the roost IMHO. Modern cardboard season tickets are infrequently actually being used by many seat holders due to e-tickets, leading to a prevalence of perfect mint tickets that are not torn like their earlier predecessors. This makes for easier collecting, but reduced potential for ever becoming a collectable that increases in value. Even though this may be a crazy analogy, I actually see collecting vintage tickets to be a bit like collecting antique milk bottles. Eventually neither may exist, but there will still be collectors because of the novelty of them being reminiscent of a bygone era... |
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I asked my wife, "Who holds onto hotel soap from 70 years ago?" Her answer was "hoarders."
The Giants owned this place and conducted Spring Training there in the 40s and 50s. |
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Is your wife calling you a hoarder now that you own the 70 year old Giants soap? :p |
We are all pathetic hoarders to some degree.
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Brad, that Hughie is an absolute STUNNER. I DEFINITEY wanna paint that someday. Wonderful pick-up.
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I need you to come over for dinner one night so I can show off my new man-cave furnishings. |
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Not many people will recognize his name, but for those that do will appreciate it. I recently acquired this 1930s Oscar George "Ox" Eckhardt Hillerich & Bradsby game used bat. Very heavy use shown with countless ball marks, stitch marks, and slight dead wood suggesting this gamer was deployed for full service!
Eckhardt holds the all-time professional baseball record for batting average, counting both major and minor league stats. Eckhardt .367 career batting average ends up fractionally ahead of #2 Ty Cobb, who’s career .366 is lowered marginally by his minor league stats. |
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A new addition to my Olympic baseball collection. I've reached out to Mercersburg Academy to see if they can provide any information.
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Attachment 295796
Added this pin to my Tiger collection |
Scorecard
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The look appeals to me for what I like to collect
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I picked up a ticket stub and scored program from Joe DiMaggio's final multi-HR game on July 29, 1951. The Yankee Clipper hit 2 HR's in Game 1 of the doubleheader.
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I've always wondered what Ruth was thinking in that photo. |
Lar Lou in your living room -Type 1 photo
The clarity is outstanding for an 8x10 action shot and Gehrig is large.
Used for numerous pieces of memorabilia. http://i947.photobucket.com/albums/a...s8yk0fsi0.jpeg http://i947.photobucket.com/albums/a...sjevn1kcg.jpeg http://i947.photobucket.com/albums/a...s06x61q73.jpeg http://i947.photobucket.com/albums/a...semza09fs.jpeg http://i947.photobucket.com/albums/a...sndngvouf.jpeg |
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Hod Eller Type I Charles Conlon photo circa 1919-1920 Reds
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I was recently invited by the show promoter of the annual Thanksgiving Moeller High School baseball card show in Cincinnati to come check it out as his guest. Regionally this show is really well known for it's large turnout focused on Reds collectors everywhere.
Fortunately I was able to pick up a few really nice items, but the highlight was scoring this Charles Conlon Type I photo of Reds no-hit pitcher Hod Eller. Eller pitched his no-hitter against the St. Louis Cards on May 11, 1919. He also was a member of the 1919 World Series Champion Cincinnati Reds and won 2 of the games in the infamous Black Sox series. I believe that this photo originates from the 1919 or 1920 season. One curiosity is the fact that the photo has both the stamp of Charles Conlon and Paul Thompson. I am certainly not as well versed on early vintage photos on this board, but was wondering if this was very common? Any help that you could give me would be greatly appreciated. :) I love the image and it's the first Type I Conlon photo that I've ever added to my no-hit collection. |
Great photo!
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Leo's Giants
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1951 New York Giants home jersey and a 35mm, 40" Wollensak telescope.
Dave Grob |
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Nice pickup (whose jersey?)! |
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Leo's Giants
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Dave Grob |
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Great photo Scott! I believe Andrew (TCMA) has mentioned photos having both stamps but I've not seen it myself before. |
One more this month
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from LOTG
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I definitely agree that Hod Eller looked like a badass. He was an Indiana raised farm boy, from what I've read. Although he didn't pitch for many years, he had a very solid performance with the exception of his last year where injuries likely were the root issue. His career ERA was really quite good from what I've seen. |
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Just picked this type 1 photo up from the 1931 World Series. Babe trying to sneak into the A's lineup!
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Thanks Scott!
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I can't remember seeing one of these in recent memory and was thankful to of snagged it.
An original Fatima Cigarettes large carton which would have housed the packs. http://photos.imageevent.com/threetw...fatimabox1.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/threetw...fatimabox2.jpg |
Nice photo of Ruth Paul.
Cool Fatima carton Tony. |
Cool pick-up Tony.
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