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Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
I will start this show with two simultaneous experiences in the Spring/Summer of 1949 when I purchased a 1-cent LEAF pack and a 5-cent BOWMAN pack.
The BOWMAN pack had 5 cards in it. I put Reynolds and Vander Meer together in my BB card album since they both pitched 2 no-hitters within one season. At age 10, I didn't know much about Wagner, but I guess I had enough respect for him since I did not insert his card in my bike's spokes :) https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...afWrappers.jpg https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...VanderMeer.jpg ------------ https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...leafwagner.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
Ted, I literally cherish every time you post stories or photos of cards you’ve pulled over the years. Still the only person I’ve ever encountered who has pulled a 52 Mantle.
I started a thread a bit ago about the cars that got you hooked. I pulled an 87 Topps McGwire in the first pack of cards my mom ever bought for me. That’s still my most meaningful. |
Love ted
I remember going to the local candy store .buying 1971 topps packs lots of them.then the supers,ahh the gum ..goiing to the schoolyard and flipping them. Man how many Clemente's did i have..The candy store is a condo now sad
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I know I pulled 10 or 11 Eddie Murray rookies. I traded them all to a classmate for a 1962 Mays around 1980. I pulled a Smith rookie or 2 in 1979 and still have them in a 2500 count box. I guess I need to go looking as an Ozzie Smith rookie sold for $222,000 plus tax the other day. I'll think on it some more and check back this weekend.
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Awesome Ted!
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Incredible Ted!
My 1st experience was asking my mom for $1.05 for something at "school" and then buying 7 (15c) 1976 Topps Baseball Packs. Got a Rooster Rick Burleson as my first card ever! Instant Sox fan! :) Sorry Mom for lying about the $1.05! :cool: Attachment 444182 |
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On the way to school in 1959 I swung by the neighborhood Utotem on my bike and bought a pack of 59 Topps and slid the unopened pack in my shirt pocket to open later. Bill Henry the relief pitcher for the Cubs at the time lived in my neighborhood and his son was on my little league team. I wanted a Bill Henry card but it had been elusive for me. Some time during the school day while I was sitting on the can I opened the pack and wallah there he was.
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I had some fun earlier tonight, pulling my late childhood binders out of the box they'd been for about 15 years, while sitting in a storage unit. Most of these were pulled from wax (or plastic) with exception of the Topps Traded rookies.
My earliest wax packs were the 1980 Topps my dad would occasionally get me from the lunch truck at his work. Still have that early early childhood collection stashed away... most all with "Ian" written on the backs. |
I was given my first pack of baseball cards in 1975. I remember that. It was at my friend's birthday party. Her dad gave me the pack. I loved those cards and looked at them often. I think I still have them somewhere.
I started really buying packs of cards in 1978 when I was 7 seven years old. I really loved the look of the 1978 Topps cards (and still do today). I remember buying another pack in early 1979. I guess I hadn't learned at that point when the change over in packs went from one year to the next, but I realized that the cards in the pack in 1979 weren't the same great looking cards that I got the year before. I remember being sad about that. My most memorable pull from a pack was a 1980 Topps Willie Stargell. It was one of the last cards that I needed from that set. As a Pirates fan, I was super excited. I opened the pack in a dark car after just buying it. It was really hard to tell in the dark, but I was pretty sure it was Willie Stargell. I was so excited. I will never forget that feeling! |
Here are my cards I cut from the back of a cereal box back in 1962 (I came back later and cut off the players photos). Also the only remaining Topps card from my original collection 1967 Vic Roznovsky.
https://www.net54baseball.com/pictur...ictureid=28679 |
At the four way intersection outside of our subdivision, there was a 7-Eleven on one corner and a Stop-N-Go on another. My brother and I would go down every week to see if they got the new series of Baseball cards in. If they did, we would each buy a box with the money we saved from our allowance. In 1967 we completed the first 6 series, but they never got the 7th series cards in. In 1968 we were both able to put together complete sets from buying packs.
https://live.staticflickr.com/1887/2...00a551de_w.jpg https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...dfd59955_n.jpg |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
Hey Guys.....this is becoming a "fun" thread.....keep your stories rolling in.....THANKS :)
One more story on the 1949 LEAF's...... Our nearby neighbor (2 blocks away) from our street lived Phil Rizzuto, so there were many avid BB fans collecting these cards in the Spring of 1949 in Hillside, NJ. We purchased these cards from the corner Candy store and also the nearby Pharmacy. So, there were plenty of wax-packs available. But, we had a problem. The backs on these LEAF's read "collect 168 cards". So we kept spending our pennies and nickels, but not getting anymore than 49 different cards. LEAF played a "nasty" trick on us kids by skip-numbering the cards. Anyway, we compared notes (cards), and came to the realization there were only 49 subjects in this series. Of the twenty HOFers in the entire 98-card set of 1949 LEAF BB, the Indians dominate with these five HOFers...... Spring series "MVP in 1948" ** http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...udreau25xb.jpghttp://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...oudreau25x.jpg.http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...eGordon25x.jpg Summer series cards (short-prints) http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...afPaige25x.jpg..https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...eafDoby25x.jpg..http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...AFFeller25.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...fPaige25xb.jpg ** Note.... Trivia: What is special and unique regarding Lou Boudreau's MVP award (December 1948) ? TED Z T206 Reference . |
The one that stands out to me was in the late summer of 1978. We lived in a small town in northern Michigan and shortly after I turned 12 that July I rode my Huffy down to the corner store and picked up a wax pack of Topps baseball cards. I sat on the bench outside and opened the pack and there it was...John Wockenfuss! The last Tigers card I needed that year. I hopped back on my bike and sped home. I ran in the house shouting "I got Wockenfuss! I got Wockenfuss!" Then I noticed a stranger sitting with my parents at the kitchen table. That day my parents sold our house and we moved 250 miles away. When I look back I always consider the end of my childhood being that year when we moved. To this day I have bittersweet memories whenever I look at that card of Johnny B.
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great stories ted. they keep getting better and better.
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The happiest part of this story is that your stall wasn't out of TP and you still have the cards!! :D
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Leave it to Ted to pull a Honus Wagner in his first pack of cards. :)
My first pack was 1984 Topps. My parents probably bought it just to shut me up in the grocery store. Little did they know what they started. The only card that I still have from that pack is a Dave Dravecky. No scan available - it's somewhere in my parents' attic, hundreds of miles away. Years later, c. 1991, I would buy 1981 Donruss cards from the LCS (I think they were $2.50 a pack). Usually threw out the ten year old gum, but one day my brother wanted to try it and he cut his tongue. I did pull the Rickey Henderson though. |
1962 Topps - 6th series. I remember it like it was yesterday. I bought a few 5 cent packs and have been addicted ever since. I also have vivid memories of going to the A&P grocery with my Mom. While she shopped, I sat on the floor in front of the Jello boxes looking through every box for Cardinals.
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Thanks for sharing! I don't think anyone else could have a better John Wockenfuss baseball card story. Brian |
My first memories of baseball cards were opening packs of 1965 Topps. I remember getting these iron on transfers with the cards. My mom took a t-shirt and covered it front and back with them.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...990cf8ab_w.jpg https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...b3afbefd_w.jpghttps://live.staticflickr.com/1887/4...d30f8731_w.jpg |
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I ended up buying two of the 1947-66 exhibit cello packs from a sealed box in 1993. There was one with Mantle on top!
I ripped both packs and got Mantle, May's, and Musial. I was ecstatic as a 15 year old pulling a mantle rookie (photo) |
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The strangest pack opening I ever experienced was walking away from the drugstore in 1980 and finding every single card in it was Dave Winfield. Literally a pack full of Winfields, with nothing else but a stick of gum. Too bad they weren't Rickey Hendersons. Oh well. I'm sure I've picked up more over the years, but here's some pages from my old album that still houses them...
Attachment 444518 |
1960 wax box opening
1960 Easter Sunday, Dad shocked me by giving me an unopened wax box of 1960 Topps...opened the whole box...Mantle series, remember getting one Mantle at least....dont recall what else...and no, I don't have the Mantle any longer, but I kept it until the early 80's as I recall...something like receiving that wax box as an 8 year old card collector you dont forget
Bruce Perry |
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I watched two nationals dealers open a 1960 cello box from the same series in the early 90's..most cards were way off center as I recall
Bruce Perry |
To recap all of our childhood dream, it might make sense to buy packs that already has star card showing like these....
69-70 Topps tallboy with Alcindor RC showing https://goldinauctions.com/LotDetail...entoryid=73259 86-87 Fleer Jordan showing https://goldinauctions.com/1986_87_F...-LOT79741.aspx |
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The first packs that I purchased were 1973 topps and I continued to buy packs through
1979. There were two stores in our small town that carried them and my best friend and I would go over town after school and buy a few packs at each store. I still have a few hundred cards, I had a lot more than that but I'm not sure what happened to them. The majority of them aren't in great condition due to handling and flipping them as a kid, anything earlier than 1973 I won flipping or I got them in a trade. I remember how strange it seemed to pull cards of the Toronto Blue Jays and the Seattle Mariners in their 1977 expansion season. Attachment 444772 Attachment 444773 Attachment 444774 Attachment 444775 Attachment 444776 |
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I started buying packs when I was 5, in 1960. Some of the first cards I remember were the Topps You'll Die Laughing cards, which were a 1959 issue. I guess the local neighborhood store still had some in 1960. I also was buying the Spook Stories in 1961. Of course I was also buying baseball and football. 1962 was the year when I really started buying very strongly. |
I don't have strong memories of any pack I opened. I do remember often trying to cram about 10 sticks of gum in my mouth at once.
In 1960, the biggest card in my neighborhood was the 1960 Fleer Football Billy Cannon Rookie card. He was a legend to us.That was the card we were all looking to get. |
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Added some photos. Some gems here.
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Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
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If I remember correctly....Boudreau is the only player/manager ever to be awarded the MVP. Furthermore, the MVP awards were announced in the first (or 2nd) week of December 1948. Which tells us that these LEAF BB cards were NEVER, ever issued in 1948. PSA is misleading the hobby by labeling them a "1948" issue. Thanks for your response. TED Z T206 Reference . |
Not just PSA. Many collecting guides over the years have labeled the as 1948-49 as well.
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It was the of late summer 1952 and our neighborhood gang, heavy into cards of course, knew the last series of those incredible new Topps cards were being distributed in our area and might even even now be sitting in our main outlet, the local drug store. Gathering our meagre resources, with some even pleading for an advance on their allowances, we rushed the store and, lo and behold, there were the shiny packs all lined up, as if waiting for kids like us. I had brought 25 cents, exactly half my weekly allowance, and quickly bought 5 packs. We all then gathered under a giant oak tree, opened our packs and started trading. Three of my packs had nothing notable, but the 4th had a Pee Wee and the last a beautiful, thank you Lord, Jackie. Since I was a Dodger's fan, I was thrilled and ran all the way home to show my Dad.
Funny, sometimes I can't remember my telephone number, but I recall that day with total clarity |
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Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
OK guys
Here is the Quintessential wax-pack scenario...... A cool day in the Fall of 1952, a day I still remember quite well. My neighbor, Johnny, tells me that our neighborhood pharmacy has the TOPPS Hi# cards available. By then, I had 270 cards (of the 310 issued). I was not interested in completing the set. I just wanted to have all the Yankees in it, especially Mickey Mantle. I had a Quarter in my pocket, so we went to the pharmacy and I get 5 packs. The first 4 packs I opened had mostly Hi # commons and semi-stars. I carefully opening the 5th pack, I slowly shuffled thru the cards, and lo and behold, the card in the middle was Mickey. All five of these cards are the original cards out of that 5th wax-pack. This wrapper is not the original one. http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...wrapper100.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...mmantle52t.jpg . . . . https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...ermspenc_1.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
About 16 years ago, my son had a handful of 1984T cards on the desk in his room. I asked where he got the cards and he said he found a box in our garage and opened a few packs. Apparently he found a box of 1984T wax baseball cards I had put away and opened a few packs. He said the gum was stale.
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As a child I would buy packs of cards with my allowance at "The Little Store". I would walk with my friend Joey Mari on Wednesdays with my dime allowance and buy two packs of cards. I always wanted to get an empty box, but was to shy to ask the store manager if I could have one. I remember one day in 1970 when packs were 10 for 10 cents, I opened a pack and there were only six cards. I was not too shy to go back in the store and demand the missing four cards. He gave me a new pack but took the six I had from the original pack.
Go back a few years to 1967, I was five and lived across the very busy street and 100 yards away from the store. I have a distinct memory of walking down to the store with my dad and sister. We each got a pack of cards. Mine were 1967 Red Sox stickers, I think my sister may have got monkey cards. I can remember her dropping her gum onto the sidewalk and crying, my dad picked it up and took it home to wash off and give it to her. I remember this as yesterday and know the "exact" spot this happened. So my first pack consisted of three 67 Topps stickers. Only one survived childhood as I put it on my Mikey Mouse Club toy box. Many years later I completed that set. Attached picture #1 is that card from my first pack, picture #2 is me with a 1970 Reggie Smith and my sisters. |
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So in my youth in Central California, one of my earliest memories are of food issue cards like Hostess, Kellogg's, etc.
BUT the first card we chased was the 1981 Granny Goose Dave Revering, who was traded to the Yankees shortly after the release of the set. Card pulled and or destroyed so it became a tough short print. I pulled one really nice example. BUT after someone offered me a stout $40 for the card, I sold it as that was incredible money at the time for a greasy card. Never had another another until many years later. I collect that card mostly to remember the fun of the chase and capture. I only need a PSA 2 and a PSA 3 to have a complete run of the card. No 10's exist. |
Not all BB cards are from wax-packs, some are from wax paper Bread packages
In the Fall of 1947, we experienced one of the most exciting World Series ever played. My sister and I carefully opened up Homogenized Bond Bread
packages for BB cards of Joe DiMaggio, Ted Williams, Stan Musial, Yogi Berra, or the new rookie sensation..... Jackie Robinson. True rookie cards...... https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...ookiestars.jpg 1947 wrapper...... http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...eadwrapper.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
Super cool and how rare that a kid would keep the cards all this time and that his orients didn’t trash them like they did my Dad’s
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Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
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Hi Chris The real credit goes to my Aunt. In 1959, my dear Aunt Anna lived alone. We had a big house, so I convinced my Mom to have Aunty move in with us. My Aunt was a proverbial "pack-rat". In 1960, I enlisted into the US Air Force. While I was there (4-years), my Mom decided to clear out my room. I was very fortunate, though, my Aunt saved all my BB cards, Lionel trains, and Stamp collection. Furthermore, she was smart enough to store all of these "goodies" in our home's attic. TED Z T206 Reference . |
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Ted, I've said it before, I'll say it again, these stories you tell are a real treat. Hearing about the Hobby back then and seeing these cards is incredible. Everyone on the whole has been sharing fantastic stories. I was given a bunch of 90 topps packs when I was a kid. My first foray into cards really. I pulled the Rookie of my Favorite player, Bernie Williams. I still have the card, I'll update with a scan of it when I get home. Not even close to the most valuable card in my collection, but a priceless memory for me! - James |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
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Hi James I appreciate your kind words. And yes, Bernie Williams was a great Centerfielder with the Yankees (16 consecutive years). The first World Series I saw (as young kid) was the 1947 Yankees vs Dodgers. In my opinion, this 7-game Series was one of the most exciting ever. The Left Fielder for the Yanks was Johnny Lindell. He was amazing both in the field and at bat (Batted = .500, Hits = 9, RBI = 7 in 6 games). I cherish his rookie card (1947 BOND BREAD). It was one of the very first Baseball cards in my collection. https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...pixlindell.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
We young kids were very pleased in the Spring of 1951 when we tore open the BOWMAN waxpacks
to see larger cards and with the player's names on the front of them. I cannot show you a 1951 BOWMAN wrapper. But I do have a seldom seen 24-count wax-pack box. This box is actually 3-dimensional. I scanned it in 2 dimensional form, so I could easily post it here. And, you could read the lettering on it. ---------------------------http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...nWaxBox17x.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...nWaxPkBoxS.jpghttp://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...axPkBox50x.jpghttp://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...xPkBoxSinv.jpg ---------------------------http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...axBox17inv.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...hiteyFordx.jpg . . http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...edWilliams.jpg 1st series ------------------------------------------------------------- Mid-series http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...iersall50x.jpg Hi # series TED Z T206 Reference . |
My contribution pales in comparison, but I pulled two future Hall-of-Famers from 'one' of the first packs my Mom allowed me to buy at the local A&P.
1964 Topps Cepeda & Santo. Of course, the actual cards are long gone, but I've replaced them - a few times. |
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Hi everyone. First post here on this forum although I've been reading a lot of threads over the last year since the covid shutdown resulted in a lot of free time and re-started my avid childhood hobby! (thanks to all who have posted great threads to help me with my collection) Anyway, I thought this would be a good thread to use for my first post.
My entire childhood centered around baseball and as a kid living in the middle of nowhere at 9,000 ft in the Colorado mountains there wasnt a lot of baseball to be played so I collected cards, especially loved 30s/40s era players. I can remember spending an entire summer getting paid $0.25 for each tent worm branch I removed from properties in preparation for a trip to the Denver lowlands to buy my prized 1940 Play Ball Mel Ott (terrible condition in retrospect!). Skipping over a long story, in 1995 the Texas Rangers drafted me and by Spring 1996 there were photographers at Spring Training scheduling photo sessions of prospects. I thought well there's no way a 5th round pick is going to end up on a card but it was super cool that a group of industry reps from my childhood hobby were interested enough to take photos so I of course agreed. Sitting at home that winter in 1995 and focused more on my workouts than my card collection, I opened up the mailbox and in it was a package from Bowman. I thought it strange since I hadnt ordered any cards or boxes recently. Inside was a letter from Bowman, a (small) check from Bowman, and a lot of 100 cards... with me on them! 1996 Bowman #150. Floored. More to the specifics of this thread on memories of opening packs of cards as a kid... So after seeing that Bowman had made a card of me, I immediately got online (think AOL dialup) and ordered a box of 1996 Bowman. What are the chances, I thought, that I would actually get one of my own cards in a pack in that box? So I got back online and ordered another box just in case. They happened to arrive the same day and I sat down at my kitchen table to unsealed the first box. As I had done starting in 1985, I picked the top pack in the upper right corner of the box out of superstition. Unbelievably my card was in the very first pack I opened! Given that collecting cards was such a huge focus of my childhood, that moment of tearing open a pack and seeing my card was without question one of the top 10 memories of my life. Here's the card (now completely worthless, haha!) |
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That's one hell of a first post. Welcome to the board.
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By the way, check out Mr. Gallagher's numbers in 1998 in hi-A ball. Must have been a fun year.
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ASF123, yep that was a crazy season... was seeing the ball well all year, no slumps. Got me onto the 40 man the next year and an automatic invite to Big League Spring Training. As a 1B, I was over there with Will Clark and Rafael Palmeiro that spring - not a bad couple guys to learn from! And yea, "top 10" also includes wedding day, day my kid was born, etc! Certainly my top baseball card memory though! |
Started collecting as a nine year old ...
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Started collecting when I was nine years old. Still have all my wax-pack pulls. One of the only toys my Mom saved ... in shoes boxes in team sets with rubber bands.
We didn't have much money growing up, so I remember collecting glass bottles throughout the neighborhood to get the return deposit, and spending the money on cards at the local neighborhood grocery store (all done by bike). |
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Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
In our neighborhood in the Spring of '52, the BOWMAN cards were available before the TOPPS. My allowance had increased as I was now 13 years old,
and was mowing our lawn, shoveling snow, etc. So, I spent all my allowance buying BB cards every week. I purchased enough BOWMAN cards to complete the 1st Series of 72 cards. And, had plenty of duplicates to trade with my buddies. This was important because when the TOPPS cards became available, the kids in our neighborhood went "wild". Our local stores could not keep in stock enough of these BOWMAN and TOPPS cards......1952 was a banner year both of these Bubble Gum Company's. Speaking about "Bubble Gum".... I have to tell you this, BOWMAN's gum was much better than TOPPS gum. BOWMAN had a tastier flavor and you could blow bigger bubbles with it. 1952 BOWMAN wrapper http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...nWrapper25.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...sMantle50x.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...raMusial50.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
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Hey Fred Look, I'm still "reeling" from a year ago when you posted the Fred Dunlap (Detroit) "fantasy card" of yours. So, any other attempts that you may try to bewilder me with is just a laugher :) Take care....ole buddy. TED Z . |
Player/Manager
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So there were two MVP player/managers. Very interesting. |
Last packs bought
I mentioned earlier in this thread that I had no memories of who was in the first pack I bought. I convinced myself to stop collecting in 1970. I was too old to keep doing it, or so I thought.
Then in 1973 I was in a drugstore and I saw they were selling rack packs. I had never seen a rack pack before, so I bought a few packs. I got two 1973 Topps Pete Roses and one Roberto Clemente. Those were the last packs I bought until I returned to the hobby in 1988. |
I opened an unopened Piedmont pack and pulled a t206 around 20 yrs ago... i know i know... no one would believe me and I didn't expect to pull t206 from it neither. There were no cellphone or easy access of video recorder back then so I didn't tape it. Anyways... i have been quietly buying that specific piedmont packs and hope to open them all one night when I got really drunk. :)
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I don't have much left of my childhood pack pulls but I do have a few: 1976 Hank Aaron, 1980 Rickey Henderson come to mind. I have quite a few cards from my childhood and early adulthood but those were not pack-pulled. As an adult I've had terrible luck busting packs. The only really good card I've ever pulled is this one:
https://photos.imageevent.com/exhibi...size/Jeter.jpg |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
I sometimes wonder, if I just had started collecting cards when I began going to Kindergarten, I would also have these gems in my original collection.
There was a nearby Candy Store on our way walking to school back in the early 1940's. BLONY Bubble Gum.....1941 Play Ball and R164 (1942-1943) cards https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...layballgrn.jpg https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...playballor.jpg https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...lltwjd1943.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
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Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
Reflecting back on hobbies in my youth, I regret not continuing Sportscard collecting after 1952. I moved on to stamps, coins, cars.....and Girls :)
I favored the BOWMAN cards, and I wish I had continued into 1953. Especially, the BOWMAN Kodakchrome color BB cards. 1953 BOWMAN wrapper. http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...erReese50x.jpg.http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...nMusial50x.jpg http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...ntlesnider.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
Some of the fondest memories from my youth are from the year 1949. There were some great movies that year..... The Sands of Iwo Jima, Samson and Delilah,
Twelve O'Clock High, The Monte Stratton Story (Jimmy Stewart does an excellent portrayal of a BB pitcher in the 1930's....check-it-out). It all began with the 1949 LEAF cards, then followed by the 1949 BOWMAN cards. My memories of collecting these BB sets are still clear in my mind. I've written articles on the LEAF set and BOWMAN set (read about them in the OLD CARDBOARD, Issue #9....and BASEBALL CARDS MAGAZINE, Spring 1983....respectively). ............ extremely rare 1949 PCL wrapper .................................................. ................... regular 5-cent 1949 wrapper https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...nwrappergb.jpg https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...manmusuial.jpg . . . .https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...Paige50x_1.jpg https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...hburn1949b.jpghttps://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...JRobbyPSA5.jpg ........................ Rookie card ........................ V---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Rookie cards ------------------------------------------------------------------V http://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...dSnider25x.jpghttp://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan7...SislerDoby.jpg 4th Series....complete 36-card sheet https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...riesheet75.jpg Hey Guys, Thanks for sharing your fond memories with us of when you started collecting Sportscards in your youth. And, let's continue hearing some more stories. TED Z T206 Reference . |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
I have received several requests for the BASEBALL CARDS MAGAZINE (Spring 1983) edition. I do not have any extras to give out. And
unfortunately the late (and great) Bob Lemke is no longer with us. Perhaps, some of the big name Book Stores can get you a copy. This issue also includes a great 8-page article on the T206 set by Lew Lipset, so it is well worth getting this magazine. My buddy from the Smokey Mountains area of North Carolina, Ralph Triplette, and I combined our research. We submitted our article to Bob Lemke. Bob was very impressed with our story as it resolved a long-standing mystery in the hobby regarding the 12 variations in the 1949 BOWMAN set. Bob published our 6-page article in his very popular BASEBALL CARDS MAGAZINE. Between Ralph and I, we have (or have seen) 6 of the 7 uncut sheets (36 cards each) which were printed in the production of this set. The elusive 7th sheet has never been seen. On display here is my simulated version of it that I constructed in 1982. The 12 variations in the 1949 BOWMAN set are re-printed subjects from earlier series in this set were included on the lower rows of the 7th sheet to fill in the spaces in BOWMAN's 36-card sheet. The evidence Ralph and I have is in the form of overprinted backs (7th series bios on 5th series cards), which reveal to us of the exact placement of 34 cards (of the 36) on this sheet. . https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...ANsheet7th.jpg https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...dsMagazine.jpg.https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...ardsMagP52.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
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I remember pulling that first tobacco card out of the pack. Luckily I had my iPhone 1 with me and took a pic! Just kidding ;) I just wanted to compete with Ted! :D
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I remember first buying Topps wax packs in 1969. No matter how many I bought with my brother and our combined allowance money, we could never get a Mantle. But we did get probably 8-9 cards of some nobody called "Rod Carew". Who knew?
I was even more into cards in 1970, and remember pulling quite a few major stars like Hank Aaron, Brooks Robinson, Mays, Clemente, and even Johnny Bench, just to name a few. I loved the gray borders and clean look compared to 1969 Topps. Just to get those took a lot of buying. Once I made the mistake of opening a pack right outside the drug store. Another kid, watching me thumb through the cards, had the temerity to tell me, "They all stink!" And he was right! In 1971 I was even more impressed by the black border design Topps put out. But for some reason, my interest waned at that time, and it didn't return until age 16 when a good friend of mine told me there was value in old cards. Up until then I had no idea that old cards could even be bought! So starting in 1976, I began buying 1950s HOFers in great condition. The first mail order I placed included a 1958 Topps card of Brooks Robinson for 75 cents. It seemed a bit expensive to me at the time, but at least I didn't have to suffer the disappointment of opening pack after pack only to find scrub after scrub. I had big plans during the summer of '77 when I landed a job toward the end of the school year at the local GNC store stocking shelves. I was calculating how long it would take me to save up for two baseball sets I was planning to buy: a 1956 Topps set ($300-NM) and a 1958 Topps set ($100-EX). I was going to get the '58 set first, but they laid me off due to summer cutbacks, so it never happened. In '78, I was off with the Marines, and really didn't get back into the hobby again until about 2002. |
Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
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Hi Rob Thanks for posting your story, "Gyrene".....and thanks for your Service to our Country. I was a "Fly-Boy" (USAF) in the 1960's. Speaking about the 1960's.....here you go...... a normal 1969 Mickey Mantle card; and, an extremely rare blue variation card. I've never seen another 1969 MM like this one. These are my only 1969 cards. https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...Mantle50xx.jpg ---- https://photos.imageevent.com/tedzan...eMantle50x.jpg TED Z T206 Reference . |
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Fun time....Show-n-Tell us of experiences pulling cards from wax-packs in your youth
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Hi Pete Please excuse the pun, but it "pales by comparison" :) My Mantle has a "deeper rich blue" color. And, really Pete....I acquired this card 35 years, and I have searched for another MM like it since then.....to no avail. Or, for that matter any other 1969 gray background card having this type of blue background. It really mystifies me. TED Z T206 Reference . |
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The things that keep us up at night!!!!! |
wax
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gr8 stuff fellas! found an old picture of me pulling "Wax" from my Xmas stocking 1967!
enjoy... Attachment 447961 |
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Glad you reached out to me on NET54 the other day. It was great talking to you yesterday! Your memory is so much better than mine, but I do like the story about us going to a card shop looking for Babe Ruth cards back then. Rob and I, living in different neighborhoods, were bused to Dr. Martin Luther King Elementary School, back when race-integration busing started. We became quick friends. I have a school class photo from back then of us, so I sent him a copy. It's funny that we both joined the military in 1978, both collect sports cards, and have been on NET54 since 2011/2012. Rob saw a few of my posts, where I stated I was from Syracuse, NY, graduated from Henninger High School, so he thought "could this be the same Tony Baldwin I went to elementary school with?" He reached out to me on NET54, and turns out, yes I was. We talked for over an hour yesterday, and it was great to catch up on what we've done over the years. We will now keep in touch! What a great experience! I don't want to create a new post, but I would like to hear if any of you have had the same experience. Either someone from your past who reached out to you on a site you were on, or you reaching out to someone from your past. Again, thanks for reaching out Rob!!!! Thanks, Tony |
We’ll miss you, Ted. Thank you for taking the time to write (and show)the things you posted here.
********* Check out the Mantle pack in post 36. An image nearly as legendary as the man who posted it. |
Super common story
87 topps on Christmas morning |
thx
thanks for resurrecting this amazing thread. Wonderful read.
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Here are some Ken Griffey Jrs I pulled from packs in my youth. I also have a display of 80s/90s unopened packs to show these vibrant eye candy designs. I open these up occasionally with the kids, brings me right back to my youth and time spent with my brother at our local card shop.
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