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Hi Net54, I recently acquired a vintage collection of ephemera and contained in the collection was this old baseball transfer item. I know there are several Japan baseball experts in this forum and maybe someone can educate me on what this is, era, etc.
Thanks in advance and I'm looking forward to thoughts or opinions. |
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It looks like something that was printed in Japan late 40's-early 50's for export to the US. I wouldn't think this is a Japanese baseball piece as much as an Anglo piece printed in Japan for the US market as none of the images are of Japanese baseball players. Keep in mind many items were being produced in Japan for export at the time under the Marshall Plan of 1948. Mostly small cheap easy to manufacture stuff in the beginning.
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Bob and Phil, Thanks for your take. Glad to hear someone else has one of these. I agree with you both. I initially thought it was for American baseball also, but the team names on the jersey's don't exactly match. I first thought the one jersey said Yankees, but it doesn't unless they really misspelled it. Of course, they have a Giants team of their own.
Trying to enjoy baseball in the 40s after WWII must have been really hard as they were devastated a country and attempting to rebuild. |
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#6
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I have something similar says made in Japan but it does depict mlb teams. These are tattoos instead of transfers and has 16 teams in it. This must be newer due to the Los Angeles and the bridge for giants.
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Now that is cool. I have never seen that specific tatoo booklet before, but I have seen some of the images. A company named the Kaumagraph Company Toy Division, out of NY, New York, used to sell some larger, individually packaged baseball iron-on team transfers for $0.29. I have several still in the packages, and noticed that the Giants and Yankees team images are basically the exact same as the ones in your tatoo booklet. These iron-on transfers do not indicate they were made in Japan, and are attributed to the manufacturers of the Mani-Yak transfers. Interesting due to the shared images.
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#12
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No doubt that it's the same manufacturer as the transfers.
The opinion about the 40s is probably spot on as all the other ephemera was from the 40s, including a boxed set of Roundup from 49. |
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