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Why does Topps love to destroy history?
Here is an ebay auction with a chase card bearing a signature of "heodore roosevel"
Why must they cut up a letter and then destroy the signature on top of that? F--- Topps, from a Theodore Roosevelt collector http://www.ebay.com/itm/TOPPS-TRIPPL...item3380ca2315 |
Truly disgusting.
Chopping the end off a common Mickey Mantle signature is bad enough. Chopping up a Theodore Roosevelt autograph is nearly criminal. The mind boggling aspect is this signature on a letter with routine content might be $700 give or take. The same signature cut up and out of context on a cheesy card and they are asking $2,500? http://www.comiccollecting.org/forum...n_e_screwy.gif |
Absolutely disgusting...showed to wife and her words exactly; "they're destroying history"
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Richard you are 100 percent correct and those that have also agreed, you are all correct. I agree with everyone that said it is sad.
I have this one question. You have ten Lou Gehrig's autographs.Topps calls on the phone and offers you a more than fair price. Do you say no I wont take your money or do you say yes? Be honest. Yes or No nothing else. What ever they do with those autographs are up to them.:confused: |
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On the Roosevelt auto for example, are the ends actually cut off or are they hidden under that fancy matte? Also, has anyone torn one of those cards apart to see how the auto is mounted? Are they taped or glued,or just there, held in tight by the pressure of the cardboard front and backs?
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I hope Topps at least buys the signatures as cuts. Has anyone spotted a before item that got made into a card?
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Give me 10 good Gehrig autographs and I will have 10 happy customers. |
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Just because some card company created a totally phony shortage by labeling the "thing" 1/1? Is that worth the premium that sellers try to sell it for. This is just the greater fool theory at its finest example. |
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However, in the example I cited of Theodore Roosevelt, it is much easier to find a letter or document signed by him than it is to find a cut signature. |
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And for $2500 I can get some nice signed pieces, yes plural, of Theodore Roosevelt, instead of one cut of "heodore roosevel"
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Autographs? ZERO intrinsic value. Trading cards? ZERO intrinsic value. The value of these things is socially constructed, and it happens to be multiplied at their intersection. Greater fool theory? Lots of people think we members of this board are all fools for putting values on slips of paper that used to go in the trash. If people approached these things rationally, there would be no autograph dealers at all. |
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Their products have become so non-compelling that even in despite of the lack of any meaningful competition they still have to have these "gimmick" cards to sell it. IMO
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Someone on a FB page on my feed posted this "pulled beauty". IM SICK
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That Jackie Robinson is god awful.
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Is the 2/3 the amount of the signature visible?
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I would still like to know if the autographs are truly trimmed or just covered by the matte.
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Fair question. if trimmed, as many of us suspect, its a travesty, as we have all said.
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Whether trimmed or not, isn't the whole thing glued together? (Meaning, it's a moot point whether they trimmed the graph before sandwiching it between layers of cardstock and glue).
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:);):p |
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:) |
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I don't think you are right there Scott. The chase cards with cut sigs sell for much more than the individual cut sig. |
Oh, I know Richard. Why did I type what I did? haha.
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