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Centering
One of my biggest challenges in grading cards is centering. From the earliest card sets to the 1970's (where my experience stops) centering has been an issue. My problem is that I can't tell the nuanced differences between 60-40 and 55-45. Has anybody found an easy way to get an accurate centering reading?
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It would be cool if there was an app that told you centering from a scan.
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Open up Microsoft Paint (or some other image program) and use the "Overlay gridlines".
https://forums.collectors.com/messag...ord1=centering |
If you have to resort to technology to differentiate, you are pursuing trivialities. You'd be surprised how accurately the human eye can differentiate between relative sizes and even colors. If it looks centered to your eye it is probably within tolerance for being considered 'centered'.
If you are worried about TPG submissions, that is another story. FWIW, when I was trying to handicap cards for a PSA submission I used a ruler with mm rule and it worked quite well in finding cards that had "9" level centering. |
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This one's always looked good to me. Microsoft Paint confirms the qualifier is incorrect according to PSA's criteria. That probably doesn't answer the question. I just derive satisfaction from parading my example of an objectively incorrect grade.
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I agree that if you can't tell a card is O/C, why ruin it by measuring. But if you are listing a card for sale as 60/40, it helps to know you're right vs the card actually being 65/35. But maybe I'm just being O/C/D.
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I understand your satisfaction. I love showing off the counterfeit card I own that PSA recently slabbed.:D |
more centering...
Be careful of Diamond cut or Tilt cut as well - where the picture can be slightly cockeyed.
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