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#1
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Posted By: leon
First of all I have my own idea of altering. I would like to know how many people think that taking a crease out of a card should lower the value of the card? I had a long talk with a few card folks today that don't have a big issue with it. I promised not to name names and I won't, as it doesn't really matter. I have heard that a crease can come back after it's been taken out but have never spoken with anyone with any first hand information that this has happened. So for sake of a, hopefully friendly debate, should taking a crease out of a card lower it's value? You've added nothing to it and not trimmed it.... |
#2
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Posted By: Peter Spaeth
Yes, clearly, in my opinion. |
#3
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Posted By: Eric B
I say yes. The integrity (strength) of the card where the crease was has been lessened and is therefore susceptible to re-creasing. |
#4
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Posted By: Anonymous
To me yes, creases are a serious issue on a card. Anything done to a card that "alters" what that card will bring in cashflow is altering a card. |
#5
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Posted By: joe
If the crease really does come back, I would say yes. If it doesn't how would you know? |
#6
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Posted By: leon
Thanks so far and let's please keep this discussion to creases and wrinkles....we already have discussed errant marks, paste, and paper remains....the consensus on that is the majority don't think it's altering in the bad sense of the word........(I don't) |
#7
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Posted By: T206Collector
...we've had this one out before. There are a few -- usually the high grade slabber folk -- that view any touching of the card to improve its condition is an impermissible alteration. To me, if you can get an improvement in its condition just by storing it pressed between two pages of a heavy book, then it is not an alteration. Only when you add chemicals or other pieces to the card is it an impermissible alteration. Pressing creases and wrinkles is fine -- especially if there is no way of proving that a crease or wrinkle was ever present. |
#8
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Posted By: Griffin's
Absolutely, for the reason that Eric B stated in his first line. |
#9
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
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#10
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Posted By: Cobby33
Oui. |
#11
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Posted By: David Vargha
I have never heard of wrinkles being removed by putting the family encyclopedia set on them. Wrinkles can and do reappear. I have issue with this. |
#12
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Posted By: ErlandStevens
Assume there are two cards of equal appearance (or grade if that's what you buy). One is disclosed as having a crease removed, and the other is not. Which would you pay more to own? |
#13
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Posted By: Brian Weisner
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#14
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Posted By: Mark Evans
Yes, but it is an alteration that I would find acceptable for my cards. Mark |
#15
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Yes it is an alteration....is it acceptable? I don't think so. And for the same reason that you should know if you're buying a used car if it's been in a wreck before. |
#16
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Posted By: T206Collector
...because while you would want to "know if you're buying a used car if it's been in a wreck before," the seller has no obligation to tell you if it has. |
#17
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Posted By: Tony Andrea
My Opinion - |
#18
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Posted By: fkw
I have seen wrinkles made to look less obvious, but I have never seen a known creased card look crease free, but Im sure card restorers can do it somehow. |
#19
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Posted By: Joann
I don't know if the creases reappear over time or not, and to me that is the cornerstone of the answer. |
#20
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Posted By: Jeff Drum
Let's say you are set up @ a show and I asked to see a card. In my examination of the card I crease it. Have I technically added anything to the card - no, same amount of paper, ink, etc. Have I "altered" it? I bet you think so. Card is now worth .3x of what it was before. What was altered was the value and hence the card. Now, take the same card and take the crease out. Have you "altered" it? I think you would have to say yes. Same amount of paper, ink, etc. but now card is worth 1x it's original value if the crease in undetectable. Again, what was altered was the value and hence the card. I guess I am saying that alteration matters where commerec is involved and it all seems like an intent to deceive and enrich to me. IF the pressers and bleachers and the like were doing this to their own cards for their own viewing pleasure it is one thing - but I think we know what is going on. It has gotten to the point where I am very leary of all high grade cards (esp. prewar) and actually would prefer to own well-centered collector grade (3-5) examples than high end because I am very skeptical of most all of them. |
#21
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Posted By: John S
Yes. |
#22
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Posted By: barry arnold
Yes, taking a crease out is really altering. |
#23
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Posted By: Josh Adams
I had an interesting conversation with my dad on this subject. While he isn't a collector, he has passed down his love of baseball to me. He asked, how is restoring a painting different from altering or restoring a card? |
#24
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Posted By: Jason L
especially for selling/trading (your reputation would suffer greatly if you deal away a card that later creases), and you would hate to buy such a card...it's like marrying a girl only to later learn she didn't disclose that she had every STD known to the medical community...actually that's probably alot different, but well, er... |
#25
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Posted By: Jeff Drum
JOsh I think that main difference may be in that you are talking about a painting that is knowingly restored and advertised as such. Opposed to a crease-free card purporting to be something it isn't. The sellers are not saying, "I once was creased but now am not." They are saying, "Look @ me, I'm a PSA8 or whatever." Big difference to me. |
#26
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Posted By: edacra
I mentioned what's considered acceptable for movie posters in the REA thread. |
#27
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Posted By: Jeff Drum
Maybe a better question to ask is, "How many of you would want to buy a crease-free card that was previously creased and not have it disclosed to you?" |
#28
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Posted By: Josh Adams
Jeff, |
#29
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Of course it is "altering". The question is inaccurately put. The real question is whether removing a crease from a card should be acceptable to collectors and deemed not to reduce the value of the card. I've always felt that we need to move toward the model of the art world and recognize that legitimate conservation and restoration has a place in the hobby. Removal of creases and extraneous materials, if done safely and permanently, should be accepted as a legitimate thing and not considered in grading. In the art world, it is not only accepted as part and parcel of preserving artwork, it is actually deemed to enhance the value of the item. At present, however, these activities are not accepted in card collecting, and consequently are performed clandestinely, and as REA seems to prove, with an eye towards "laundering" the card through a grading service after the work is done so it can be sold with the implicit guarantee that it is unaltered. I therefore conclude that under the present scheme of things, removing a crease and trying to sell the card without disclosure is a deceptive practice. It may be that 25 years from now we all laugh at the notion that we were so backwards on this issue, just as we all laughed 15 years ago when the idea of slabbing was first introduced. |
#30
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Posted By: Eric B
I'm not sure it's similar to compare restoring a painting to altering a card. A painting is an original work, while a card is essentially a print. |
#31
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Posted By: leon
Of course it is "altering" and I did state it incorrectly...I then used it in another thread and had the disclaimer of "in the bad sense"....which wasn't much better |
#32
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Posted By: Brian
Yes, and I'd hope that a seller would disclose this information. |
#33
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Posted By: Dan Koteles
ask Burt Reynolds ! |
#34
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Posted By: jackgoodman
It seems restoration, repair, cleaning, etc are acceptable actions in every collectible field (art, comic books, etc) except baseball cards. Are we really such a bunch of purists? |
#35
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Posted By: cmoking
Adam - in the art world, is it correct to assume that when a painting is sold, any restoration or touch-up is announced and buyers know what was done? When they auction off a painting, are there ever any hidden restorations not revealed to the buyers? I'm assuming the answer is no, everything is revealed and all restorations for paintings are announced when it is put up for sale. |
#36
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Posted By: Anonymous
I think if Burt Reynolds were to be injected with Botox and put into a screwdown for a year, he still would grade no better than VG/EX. "Man Law"....... |
#37
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Posted By: Tony Conte
is Yes! |
#38
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
I believe one difference is that if left to the ravages of time, art truly would lose its aesthetic value and could not be appreciated. As so many people here have pointed out though, even off condition baseball cards (at least through 100 years) clearly retain their aesthetic value at least in all but the most ravaged condition. |
#39
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Posted By: Brian
yes |
#40
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Ugh!!! |
#41
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Posted By: Bottom of the Ninth
Not to get off of the topic but restoring a painting is very different than restoring a card. I do not collect paintings but I suspect that restored paintings come with full disclosure, which does not happen with "restored" cards that have been professionally graded and assigned a numerical grade. In addition, most cards have far more than 1 copy whereas paintings are unique and have greater historical importance. Paintings also do not go through the same kind of "wash" that cards go through via a grading process. |
#42
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Posted By: Dan Koteles
as much as Iam with you on this , it'll never happen when there are too many "BIG MONEY" players out there. |
#43
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Posted By: davidcyleback
If restoration has no effect on the value of a card, there's no reason not to disclose the restoration at sale. |
#44
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Posted By: JK
At first, I agreed with Adam's post. Specifically, we should accept restoration and take it out of the closet and make it above board. Then I read Greg's post and he made an excellent point regarding the one of a kind nature of most art work. I wonder if we uniformally began to accept restored cards (which implies that disclosure would become the norm) if what we would see is everyone starting to do it, ultimately making many cards "high grade" and thereby decreasing the value of our own material in the long run. |
#45
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
This is sounding more and more like wimmen, every post. |
#46
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
I do not share your concern there JK. For example, if full disclosure is the norm, collectors can differentiate based on their preferences just like they do now with reprints and other cards (such as those rare blank backed hand cut cards .... which may have been an advertising piece, notebook cover, etc at one time). |
#47
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Posted By: Ricky Y
I'd considered it altering if something that was there naturally due to normal handling has disappered including removing creases. As long as its disclosed as such...I wouldn't mind having it in my collection. |
#48
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Greg, |
#49
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Posted By: jay behrens
Tony Andrea said it best so far. |
#50
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Posted By: Jeff Drum
One difference between removing a crease and erasing a pencil mark; a pencil mark represents something added and then taken away. A crease for lack of a better way to explain is a reconfiguration of the original state - not an addition. |
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