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#1
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Posted By: ephuspitch
So, the first batch of vintage cards I ever laid eyes on was one big, original hoard. A friend of the family found them, literally, under the floorboards in his attic ... they must've been put up there before 1935 or so, because everything in the box was pre-1913 (except for one mysterious Diamond Star Charlie Gehringer) ... about 50% T206, 25% T210, and mostly T204 and T205 from there ... with a few double folders and triple folders mixed in. |
#2
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Posted By: BRIAN
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#3
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Posted By: Ephuspitch
Well, from what I've learned on this board, I can just send them to a fly-by-night company, and they'll get graded for sure ... or I can even make up my own grading company within a day or two, and they'll get 10s. |
#4
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Posted By: Marc S.
Just as medical schools would rather reject potentially good doctors rather than admitting a potentially bad doctor -- the grading companies would rather reject an authentic card than encapsulate a questionable card. |
#5
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Posted By: BRIAN
I've seen t206's that are short that look much better than oversized cards that have been trimmed. Until a few years ago I never even considered that some t cards had been trimmed. I can't help but wonder, how do we really know what size they were intended to be? |
#6
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Posted By: runscott
I have an e96 Baker that is wide and short, but it's so beat up that I know there was no incentive to trim it. Same with a few t206's - the "Bender throwing" cards seem to often be wide. Maybe they were positioned on the edge of the sheet. I have another t206 that is wide and short, but appears to have been hand-cut. |
#7
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I have an article (I think) coming out in the next VCBC on this situation. Here is an excerpt: |
#8
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Posted By: Brian Hodes
I have had the same sort of concerns about getting cards back that I knew were not trimmed. |
#9
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Posted By: Marc S.
Brian wrote: |
#10
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Posted By: Sonny Tutor
While your analogy relating card encapsulation to medical school admission is good in that it explains your point, it is, unfortunately, inaccurate with regard to the medical admissions process. All too often highly qualified, more personable individuals are looked over in the process of selecting classes with more esthetically pleasing demographics. |
#11
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Posted By: Marc S.
Though I take everything in stride, that I was just denied admission to my MBA school of choice (again) always makes that little itch in the back of my head act up when it comes to pleasing the demographics environment. |
#12
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
I've always been told that cards were trimmed early in order to get them to fit into something, a row in a box, or a holder of some sort. |
#13
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
I guess we aren't talking about them, but I bought a PSA 6 N162 Brouthers from Shoebox (Wayne Varner), for $2200--is that something a grading company should be careful of? YES. When I took it out of the holder, I found three corners were indeed ex-mint, card was clean and well-centered--but one corner was, like--ex. It was mainly the lack of symmatry that bothered me. The other corners weren't razor-sharp, but just came to nice, quiet points, but the one--no point. |
#14
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Posted By: vorthian
<< The card was returned to me ungraded as trimmed. I was rather surprised by their determination that the card was altered since I had purchased the card from Kit Young and had carefully inspected it when it arrived, and was therefore reasonably certain of its status. >> |
#15
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Posted By: harry
The grading companies do not know when they are grading a totally "fresh" group of "t" cards from one that has been put together over time, piece by piece. I am sure that many times, they are on the fence about whether a card has been altered or not. While most altering is probably pretty clear cut, I bet that sometimes is is questionable and hard to figure out. One day it comes back trimmed, another day it gets graded. It is just the nature of the beast with any third-party service that is ultimately subjective as humans are involved. |
#16
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I pointed out not to flag Kit Young as good or bad but to show that SGC couldn't get its story straight from month to month. Why was it bad one day but good a month later? I also think about the ramifications of these determinations. There were some real slap fights on the old Full Count board between buyers and sellers of raw cards over grading service opinions; it concerns the heck out of me that these opinions are being treated as gospel when they are anything but. |
#17
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Posted By: Eric
I find this to be an interesting topic. To even have a remote chance of accurately determining whether or not a card has been trimmed, one would have to obtain the machine(s) used to cut the card. After the machine was obtained, one would have to cut a card with the device and compare the cards' striation marks to the striation marks on the card in question. This comparison would have to be done under a microscope. At this point, you MIGHT be able to determine whether or not the striation marks on the card in question are the same as those on the card you've just cut. Does this sound ludicrous? You bet! Why?? Well, although this is a valid method of examining a card for evidence of trimming, it is doubtful that the original cutting machines are still in existence. In addition, as the cards age, the paper begins to deteriorate (particularly along the edges), making it even harder to examine the striation marks. You would also have to take into account how sharp (or dull) the cutting blade is. There are a lot of factors to consider when it comes to card trimming. I have seen dealers at card shows pull out a magnifier, observe paper fibers sticking up, and proclaim that the card has been trimmed. This is NOT an accurate way to determine if a card has been trimmed!! |
#18
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Posted By: runscott
would there still be incentive to trim cards? |
#19
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Posted By: Marc S.
Runscott....my recollection is that the grading companies came about in the late 1980's/early 1990's specifically because many high $$$ collectors were purchasing Mantle/Ruth/Cobb, etc. cards that had been trimmed/altered, etc. and they wanted another professional opinion before spending serious $$$ on cards. |
#20
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Posted By: leon
Very good points. I appreciate your thoughts on the subject. As a relative newcomer to collecting I have a harder time with trimming than I do with most other things. Case in point. I am buying a D359 Williams Baking card (from FKW- sorry Scott couldn't wait for ya) and it has a very close top border. I mean it is about 1/32 of an inch or less. As always Frank is the ultimate collectors friend and has said he will let me send it in and if it comes back trimmed he will give me a refund. He is actually sending me the card before I pay for it (but that's beside the point). He asked if I had another card to look at to compare. I had forgotten I had a D359 Rochester card but then checked it. One small thing is that when I won the card on ebay a few years ago it came with a note that said that this card was this persons grandfathers and he had gotten it as a kid (I presume from a loaf of bread) so please take care of it......This note was sent after the auction so I know it was not hype (why would it be?) I compared the scan Frank sent me to my card and looked for correct measurements in the SCD. Guess what? My card is cut very close at the top, has rounded corners AND is a tad smaller than the card Frank is sending AND smaller than the dimensions stated in the SCD. I will inspect the new card when I get it but if it is not wavy and doesn't have any of the indentions mentioned, I will probably hang onto it. I am getting to see Jays and some others points about some of this stuff. I think I am becoming a better judge (after seeing enough cards) than what a grading company is !! With all that said I still do not mind the verification although size of most old issues concerns me less than those darn wavy cuts....regards all... |
#21
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Posted By: jay behrens
Indirectly, I would say Jim Copeland is responsible for most the trimming that went on in the late 80s. He was paying such insanely high prices for high grade cards that every dealer without a soul was trimming his HOFers and desirable cards to sell to Copeland. It's becuase of this that the grading companies finally had some momentum to get going and stay in business. |
#22
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Posted By: Julie Vognar
even if (o if only!) all grading companies were disallowed. I've bought very few graded cards, but that didn't stop me from getting trimmed ones! Look a little nicer, bring in a little more dough. |
#23
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Posted By: warshawlaw
You cannot definitively say whether a card that is within 1/32" of standard is trimmed, for the most part. Now, the Dempsey I got PRO graded 7.0, after I cracked it out, I could evaluate the edges under a magnifier and it was clear to me that the left edge was trimmed. The cardboard was not aged on that edge like it was on the other three edges. |
#24
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Posted By: Ken W.
I don't mean to bring the level of this discussion down to the era of "modern" cards-- the 1960s--but I need some help. I have written to PSA, Sy Berger, and talked to SGC about my Topps cards from the '60s, mostly all-star rookies, WS subsets, a '68 set, and '64 Giants, and no one will give me a number, such as 1/32nd or 1/64th, which I should accept as a variation from the supposed intended size of manufacture, without worrying about trimming. I have many commons worth less than one dollar that are short 1/64th or less, usually l to r. No one would go to the trouble to cut these cards, would they? I have several PSA graded '68 HOFers which are 1/64th short, but they are graded so I shouldn't worry about them being cut, right? I have collected these cards over 14 years and acquired them from many sources, and they display the same characteristics generally. Doesn't that support the conclusion that size variances resulting from the manufacturing process were common-- I mean not everyone is cutting cards are they? Does anyone know what tolerances Topps had, if any? Are there any articles on this subject written by an authority on the manufacturing process and tolerances? For cards I am buying now I have finally made the decision that if the card is short 1/64th or less, and doesn't show signs of trimming, i.e. clean edges when the others are dull, wavey edges, and such, I will accept the card as unaltered. By worrying about cards being short by 1/64th am I being paranoid? Any comments on this approach or information on this issue would be appreciated. |
#25
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Posted By: Marc S.
I don't think many people are as concerned about 1/64 of an inch with 1960s Topps cards. A few thoughts of my own: |
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