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Restored Honus Wagner at SCP Auctions
Hi
Any thoughts on the T206 Honus Wagner Authentic Restored? The pre auction estimate was $2,000,000 https://catalog.scpauctions.com/1909...-LOT48850.aspx Just tough when you think about that kind of money for a card that was "restored" |
Before the restoration
"This example once suffered from a surface crease which detracted from the beauty of the card. " https://i.imgur.com/2iUGYG1.jpg |
$2m seems conservative to me. IMO.
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I LOVE the beginning of the description . . .
"Every hobby has its penultimate prize," When my kids were young (20 years ago) when we'd go out for dinner on a Friday night, I would teach the kids a new word. One of those nights, the word was penultimate. Within a couple of weeks, my son's grammar school teacher misused the word and got called out on it! So, was the word misused in the auction description, or are they cleverly pointing out that the restored version is the next to last prize! |
Agreed. Sacrilegious to do anything to that original card. IMO.
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The write-up states "“AUTHENTIC RESTORED,” a designation instituted by PSA for use on higher end vintage treasures."
Have they used this designation before or did they institute it expressly for the Wagner? |
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How much of a card has to be left for it to be "authentic"? If I take a T206 Harry Steinfeldt and draw Honus over it so it looks realistic, is that an "authentic" T206 Wagner? Because in my opinion, this treasure is now ruined.
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It is a Wagner painting now, not a card anymore.
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That T206 Wagner looks to have a bit more than a surface crease (singular) in the “before” picture.
What happened to this PSA 7 1933 Goudey Ruth that is also in the SCP Auction. I am not sure how they can rate this as a “9/10 in the eye appeal department.” https://catalog.scpauctions.com/1933...-LOT48853.aspx |
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I think they meant the back is 9/10 in the eye appeal.... which I agree. How come this Ruth can zoom in much closer than the Wagner? Are they trying to hide the true current condition of the Wagner? |
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That card looks weird. Like they drew him with too much makeup. The other Wagner is the the one at the Baseball HOF.
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Brian |
You can blow up a Jordan Photograph 20x but this Wagner can only blow up 1.25x ... why?? :confused:
https://catalog.scpauctions.com/STUN...-LOT50039.aspx |
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This one doesn't even have a crease. First $3 million takes it.
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I saw that!
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ugliest wagner i've ever seen. if that's a 2 million card I'll eat a t206!
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The card looks 1000 times better now than before. If I had the money I'd go for it.
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Hey, I had to draw that guy from memory!
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Perhaps others are reading our forum (or not)
But after the first day the bidding is only at $389k. I thought it would have been a bit higher after one day with more bidders getting in their bids early. |
I personally wouldn't want any part of that card, even if I did have the money.
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A few hours and a few bids later and the auction price on the Wagner jumped fast.
$835k before BP and $1 million with buyers premium. I guess bidders are looking at as a restoration that adds value versus altered and potentially devalued. Either that or just to be to able to get the “Holy Grail” of baseball Cards Looks like their are interested bidders and things will get interesting |
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" GEM MINT reverse and pin point sharp corners give this example a 9/10 in the eye appeal department in our view." Whomever "our" is certainly isn't a collector. Because of the sharp corners and great looking back I would give it a 2, at best. As for the Wagner. Ugh..... what the heck? I agree they should return the make up they put on him. I honestly think I liked it better unrestored. It looks fake now., . |
I am convinced that other than true, diehard collectors, people are buying the holder and not the card. I absolutely believe that if PSA were ever to do an April Fool's joke and issue an empty holder with a flip that says, "T206 Honus Wagner Invisible Gem-Mt 10," there would be a bidding frenzy on it.
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Good excuse for me to show off my #144 SGC 2 once again. I challenge the 7, stamp and all! ;) https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...6b8c3536_z.jpghttps://live.staticflickr.com/65535/...ba521c6a_z.jpg |
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I can't agree more Chad, I'd take your 2 over that "7" anyday, BTW, nice card! |
As long as it's clearly labeled as restored, I don't have a problem in the world with it. However, I admit I collect "Authentic" cards with no qualms.
Actually interested in the final hammer on this as it will be telling on the overall temperature of collectors on the owners choice to have it worked on. |
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RESERVES A Reserve price is a minimum bid below which the lot will not be sold. Accordingly, if the reserve price is not met at the conclusion of the auction, the lot will not be sold. Reserve bid prices are not publicly available and will not be published. Any item with an unmet reserve will be annotated with "Reserve Not Met" in the online bidding. SCP may implement this reserve by bidding on behalf of the consigner and may place a bid up to the amount one increment below the reserve, by placing successive bids if necessary. No reserve bids placed by SCP will be executed at a level greater than one bid below the actual reserve. Any lot that had an unmet reserve at the conclusion of the auction will show as a "PASS" in the online catalog. Reserves when in place will be pre-determined and set within the auction software prior to the start of the auction. Maximum bids will be treated as straight bids on items with reserves until the reserve price is met. If you place a maximum bid in excess of a reserve amount that has not yet been met, your bid will automatically be placed at the reserve price. All bids placed after a reserve has been met will continue with normal bidding increments unless straight bids are placed by a bidder. The point is we have no idea how many, if any, of these recent bids are anything more than the house making consecutive bids on behalf of the consignor to give the impression of bidder interest (which is exactly what is needed to generate the highest price). Maybe SCP read Jeff's prior post (#22) in this thread commenting on the lack of bidding the first day of bidding? Suddenly the bids started coming in and in Jeff's next post 13 hours later the bidding (with the BP) had hit the psychologically significant $1M level. This to me well symbolizes the deceptive (but legal aspect) of the auction business -- the ability of the house to exercise bids on behalf of the consignor up to (the low end of) the item's estimated value. This tactic is universally employed by all prominent HAs across all fields of collecting, and absent federal legislation prohibiting the practice almost certainly will continue. HAs are expected by their consignors (and shareholders) to generate the highest possible prices for their consignors, and what state would dare proscribe the practice and induce HAs thinking of setting up/already headquartered in their jurisdictions to flee to a neighboring state? Not to mention too I doubt these states mind receiving the extra sales/use tax they receive by higher auctions prices. I have referred to this practice of HAs exercising secret bids on behalf of the consignor to induce prospective bidders to believe there is genuine market interest at those levels as legalized fraud. Yes, if one reads the fine print one can be put on notice of the practice and therefore the uncertainty of the genuineness of any bid below the reserve price. But IMO it is the exception, not the rule, that auction observers are aware of what the auction rules allow to take place behind the scenes. Isn't the premise behind the illegality of fraudulent practices society's refusal to be a party to inducing people to believe something that in fact is not true, all with the objective of getting a person to be willing to pay something that otherwise he/she would not pay? HAs will respond that by disclosing in the rules that the practice exists, therefore bidders/observers have been fairly put on notice. But is that really true? At the end of the day why should a bidder need to have any uncertainty whether he/she is bidding against a "real" person? |
"SCP may implement this reserve by bidding on behalf of the consigner and may place a bid up to the amount one increment below the reserve, by placing successive bids if necessary. No reserve bids placed by SCP will be executed at a level greater than one bid below the actual reserve."
^^^^ no good!!!! On top of that..... I know SCP would call underbidders after auction is over and offer u items at the reserve plus juice. |
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You guys need to consider all sides, not just the buyer looking to get steals. If you owned a card that just sold for 2.5 million dollars, you wouldn't sell yours for 1 million. You would want a reserve to protect your investment.
From the AH side, they aren't going to want a bunch of cards with high reserves that don't sell. They make their money on BP. They need cards to sell. They are only going to accept reserves for high profile cards and they are going to want most to be reasonable. A Wagner is going to get eyes on their other cards, so why wouldn't they do what it takes to get a copy of the Hobby's best card in their auction? |
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+1 to what Corey said so very well.
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Maybe PWCC "conservation " is taking a foothold |
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That Card will continue to Be the Holy Grail of Cards to many collectors for decades to come. Of Course we do not know the reserve but I hope it does sell and changes hands to someone hopefully is a collector vs an investor. |
That really is funny. "a surface crease" More like a bicycle spoke card LOL.
It sounds like Larry Fritsch's (RIP) grading. And if you ordered 8 cards and returned 3 (about normal) due to missing chunks and described as VG :), then you got 5 really good deals. Always a prompt refund but you had to write what your issues were, with each one, when returning cards. He had some scarce cards back in the day. Always fun... Good luck to whomever goes for this Wagner. It's a humdinger. . Quote:
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I predict 1.33 Million for this patch up job
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IMO that is one really ugly Wagner. It looks like someone stuck Jimmy Durante’s nose on Honus’ face.
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The card hasn’t received a bid since the first day. It’s gotten 11 bids and the reserve had not been met. The card currently sits $1.2mm below the AH’s estimate.
Although I would love to see this “example” get to the AH’s $2mm+ estimate, My money is on the card not hitting its reserve and not selling (a pass). I also believe that the card would do better in it’s pre-restoration condition; in other words, I think the card is worth less in its current state than before it was restored. |
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I like the restored version.
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Too bad you can't un-restore a card. :D
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It is my feeling that an item should always sell for one bid more than the second most interested party is willing to pay. I find anything that interferes with that anathema to the auction process.
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As a teenager (which for me was about a two decade process), if I bought something at a Saturday auction (I'm talking live in person auctions, pre eBay, and not talking baseball card auctions), Dad would see whatever it was and ask me what I'd paid for it, then he'd say "Well, when you buy something at an auction you can know one thing, that you paid more for something than anyone else there thought it was worth." But he'd been a child from the Depression.
We've become a nation of haters. And I see that in myself. I'm not very keen on the slabbing/grading of cards. But with this Wagner card I can see that it would be better preserved inside the plastic. I'm amused by what I see as the ardent fans of graded cards having their faith shaken by an altered card inside the slab. Come on now... the card is a genuine Wagner. It looks better after it was worked on. It's in graded plastic. Who of us would not welcome that card into their collection? And are there any of us who, if we were given that card, we'd then burn it? I like it. |
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That being said I don't believe in high starting bids or reserves either, but I have no problem chalking that up to personal taste and don't see anything wrong with either practice |
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Yawl need to cut this restorer some slack. He was given this nightmare of a card to work on, and it must have been extremely difficult. He had to spend days looking at this card under magnification and try to recreate the print spots. Obviously, matching the ink, which was made a hundred and ten years ago, wasn't easy to do. If you study the orange background, you'll see the colored-in areas appear yellowish. Again, what a mess. They should have just left the thing alone. |
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I would be proud if I owned the unrestored card.
Regardless of how the restorer did and obviously it “worked” because someone is willing to pay a lot for this card. But I like they way it was and I personally do not like the card being touched up |
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Many years ago there was a restored Wagner for sale in Mastros; the restoration was later "reversed", although PSA still re-slabbed it as "authentic, altered". Here's an image post-restoration reversal... |
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Here's the restored version. Attachment 483906 |
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I do not understand why they restored this one in the first place |
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It’s. A. Wagner.
Going to sell for a small fortune. Rightfully so. $2m |
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and for the Wags that had the restoration removed. Good call. . |
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I am assuming the buyers are looking at this as a piece of art then a baseball card collector. A display piece and they would rather look pretty.
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And they will probably just be displaying it or showing it in that fashion and/or as a Piece of Art or Both |
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