What constitutes a wrinkle of a crease?
Someone asked me for more information on a
1967 Topps #200 Willie Mays card I have available for trade, so I grabbed pics and am trying to describe it accurately. Here's the question...
What actually constitutes a crease or wrinkle to the TPGs??
In the first shot, I captured the sun's reflection off the overall gloss of the card front. It looks pretty consistent throughout, but on further
‘scangling’ (tilting it in the light) to really focus in on that area, there is a definite straight line cleft in the gloss up there. It very well may be naturally occurring, as there isn't even a hint of damage in the area, and it doesn't in any way, shape or form appear on back. I would never call it a wrinkle or crease, but it is some sort of impression that is only gloss deep (no cardboard was harmed in filming this movie).
• Wishful thinking aside, would this impression in the gloss be considered a member of the crease/wrinkle family and immediately drop it down to a maximum grade of a PSA 4 (or whatever), before it's even looked at?
• Or is this type of thing considered a 'normal'(?) surface anomaly that would
NOT immediately drop the number grade (unless, of course, it's one of multiple factors that combine to lower the grade)?
• Does anyone have any specific insight into this? We all see all sorts of natural (sometimes unnatural) pock marks and whatnot on the surfaces of cards, but when do they turn into number-dropping detractions?
1967mayswrinkle?.jpg
The obvious answer is yes, it has to be considered a wrinkle, but does anyone have any specific information from a TPG's perspective?
ETA:
For context, let me add a normal pic to illustrate what I mean by there being no damage or anything a normal person would call a crease. Tilting it like that into the heart of the sun really overblows it...
1967mayswrinkle?02.jpg