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Tarrytown, NY show report
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Drove up today. My first show since Covid arrived on the scene. They said 150 tables but that seemed a bit inflated. Was at a Marriot hotel instead of the Westchester Civic Center.
Glad I went but didn't buy anything. Told myself I'd stay an hour and was probably there less than that. A decent mix of vintage, modern shiny stuff, some football, etc. Seemed like most of the business I saw was taking place on modern and not vintage. Modern outnumbered but some sweet cases of vintage and a few familiar faces. The only AHs I saw were Memory Lane and Iconic (?). I was not thrilled with the social distancing aspect if it. Mask wearing was probably at around 50%, and lots of guys wear the mask covering their mouth only. Decent number of kids which is nice to see. Seemed a lot of the aisles were too crowded, to the point that I had to ask someone to let me by Was a decent crowd, a few signers (Jesse Orosco, Mookie Wilson). All and all I took me 45 minutes to drive their each way and I stayed about 45 minutes. Cool little Sunday trip. Like most things with Covid, I don't know whether I enjoyed it or was depressed thinking how different it was. I personally didn't feel comfortable around that many unmasked people in a relatively small room. But when you see a case like this as a vintage collector something just kicks in and you get a little buzz going. |
Yeah, that's a nice case indeed
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People are walking away from high number prices on vintage cards at shows, they’re not paying anywhere close to what auction houses are realizing on them.
The reason there was action on modern in my belief is because it’s dropping big time, dealers are wheeling and dealing it. |
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I just don't think shows are very conducive to a big vintage purchase. I realize you can look at card with your own eyes, but often time its cash only ($5000 in cash, really, you think I'm walking around with that?) and the noise and chaos of shows sometimes is counterproductive to deal making. In the quiet of my office I can investigate, leisurely, whether $2000 is a fair price for that card. And I think a lot of people are intimidated or at least a little uncomfortable with face to face negotiations. And there's the show silliness where cards are not marked with a price, the prices mean nothing, etc. All in all, it was nice to be at a show. Fingers crossed the National happens. |
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Looks like Stan's case for sure! He always has great stuff! Great guy, too! |
Wow that is a nice looking case and thanks for sharing the recap
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Thanks for the update, Steve.
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