Quote:
Originally Posted by rhettyeakley
I respectfully disagree, I have ~4,000 pre WWII sports cards and ~1500 pre-1930 Nonsports cards and only a hundred or two are actually graded (and that is because I bought them that way). Nothing wrong with grading cards, I prefer to buy more cards with the money but to each his own but to think that any card "worth its weight" is graded is wrong.
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I guess I should have clarified. Username's orig. post was about people tracking down collections of what I would consider "legendary" collections (in other words, collections that have a name for themselves) and in my mind, that means cards of significant value (5K apiece, at least). For example, I'm not talking about going out and branding my PSA4 average Leaf set...no one would care unless I became President or something. My set's not worthy of branding. That's what I meant that any card worth it's weight would be graded (in context of the branding argument). Few legendary collectors spend five or six figures on a raw card. There's just too much risk for both buyer AND seller.
Case in point - Look at this data of historical sales:
http://www.t206museum.com/page/ne_auct.html ... how many single card auctions wins above 5K do you see with unslabbed cards?