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#1
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I won one of the lots of the scrapbook V61s that went off on eBay Monday night. It arrived this afternoon. (Wow! Thanks, mintbid/Mike Schramm!) http://www.ebay.com/itm/221046166100...84.m1439.l2649
I've soaked tobacco and caramel cards successfully, but I've never soaked one with the glossy coating like these have. The seller said that he "steamed" one off, and it received a 3 from PSA, but I don't put much stock in the grading. What say the experts? Will the coating come off as part of the soaking? Thanks, Bill Last edited by birdman42; 06-21-2012 at 01:40 PM. Reason: Found out who the seller is |
#2
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If it were mine I would soak that sucker. Nothing fancy....some warm tap water in a bowl, dunk it and leave in there a few minutes, seeing if the back paper will float off. I have had great success soaking most cards. WARNING- I have never tried it with one of these types .....but I think it would do fine. Hopefully others have tried and will relay their experience(s).
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#3
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So you really just dunk them into the water and let them float around for a while? I've never soaked a card and feel like I'd have a heart attack doing that. When you take them out of the water do you just let them air dry? They don't wrinkle at all?
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#4
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Here's what I've done after soaking with no problems...
Put it between 2 white paper napkins or paper towels and lay between two very hard flat surfaces. I used two 12 inch granite tiles. After an hour or so, I replaced the wet paper with fresh napkins and "tiled" them again. After 3 days, the card will be dry and straight. I'm sure others have performed this process in similar ways. |
#5
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+1, scares me to death lol
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#6
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Thanks for the encouragement, guys. I think Messers. Goslin and Donohue are going swimming this weekend.
For those of you who have never tried soaking, some cards--most Ts and Es--soak just fine. Follow the directions above. Others are a disaster. I wouldn't soak anything post-war, and of course the real photo items like T200s and T222s are a definite no-no. Some you can soak, but very carefully, like the Allen & Ginters. (I've tried the various Birds series, and I assume the others would be similar.) The paper holds up pretty well, but it does get a little soft and you have to be careful about trying to use a Q-tip to remove scrapbook paper--you might end up removing a little of the surface of the card at the same time. Bill |
#7
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Just so you'll be less stressed about it, soak the worst of the bunch first, and get a feel for how that goes and what you're doing... It'll be just fine.
Last edited by FrankWakefield; 06-21-2012 at 03:39 PM. |
#8
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Double up some papertowel, place card tween two layers and use a heavy book. Replace paper after first hour, swap in a few more and leave overnight or until dry.
Crummy video of a test on a beater. Video ![]()
__________________
T206 gallery |
#9
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Don't forget to dunk the entire card. If you let it float or only do one side (for whatever reason), some of the accumulated dirt and oil will slide over and leave a line.
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#10
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Bringing this back from the dead with a question.
Can you soak 1950's or 60's topps cards? Also.... I have a jackie robinson that would grade a 7 but has ink on the back. I need it for my collection. Is there a way to remove ink? HELP. Not looking to do anything shady, just want it for myself. |
#11
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__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#12
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I guess it is common sense that water would unstick glue. I just figured it would have a negative effect on the card.
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#13
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A year in and no issues for me, maybe if it was slabbed shortly after and some humidity was trapped you might see signs.
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T206 gallery |
#14
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I actually won two of the V61 lots from the same auction (Grover Alexander & Max Carey). I'm also currently in the process of soaking both lots. The tricky thing about the cards I won is that there are two cards stuck back to back with the scrap book page between them. It seems that the page ends up favoring one of the two cards, and so far, my pages have been favoring the HOF cards (good taste). Good luck! Jeff Last edited by big80s; 06-30-2012 at 10:29 AM. |
#15
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Does anyone know or have experience with soaking Zeenuts? I have a really nice Zeenut card that was entirely kept in an album. Although it is a blank back card, I would nonetheless prefer to remove the album backing if at all possible.
Any advice? |
#16
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Zee-Nuts soak just fine... And Chris, that Hassan triple folder will soak wonderfully well. You'll post before and after scans that will make you proud!
Last edited by FrankWakefield; 06-27-2012 at 05:29 PM. |
#17
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Bill,
Have you soaked the Goose? |
#18
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John,
I haven't taken Goose swimming yet. I have heard from Jeff (post above) who won a couple other lots from the same scrapbook. He tried soaking them for more than a day. He said the paper did eventually come off the backs just fine, but the fronts were ruined. That was my concern--what would happen to the glossy fronts on these V61s? I haven't checked in with the seller yet. He said that he had steamed one off successfully and a TPG gave it a 3. If it was just a layer of paper on the back, rather than two cards stuck to the same sheet back-to-back, that would make a difference, I think. I've had good experiences with cards that were just lithos, but now I'm not comfortable at all soaking these. I may just end up with a Siamese twin card in my collection. (Apologies to all my Thai friends.) So to repeat my original question: Has anyone had any experience soaking cards with glossy fronts? M101-4/5, V61, etc. The one person I've heard from says ix-nay on the oaking-say. Here are some responses that won't be helpful. (Sorry if this comes across as snarky, but these have all been hashed out many times before.) What!? How do you soak cards?Bill Last edited by birdman42; 06-30-2012 at 06:04 PM. Reason: I read back through the thread |
#19
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I just posted this on the screw down thread, but thought it should be posted here as well.
I have a number of flat lucite screw down holders. For display and storage over tightening the screws can be a problem. If you're a card "soaker" there is no better way to dry the cards than between paper towels in a flat screw down holder. Changing the paper once or twice, I can get a card dry in several hours rather than several days using this technique without the need for weight.
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RAUCOUS SPORTS CARD FORUM MEMBER AND MONSTER FATHER. GOOD FOR THE HOBBY AND THE FORUM WITH A VAULT IN AN UNDISCLOSED LOCATION FILLED WITH WORTHLESS NON-FUNGIBLES 274/1000 Monster Number |
#20
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My recollection is that I soaked a V61 and it came out just fine. I did not soak it for 3 days... more like a few hours.
Again, I'd start with the least/worst of them, do that one for a short period of time, and see what you think. I doubt that you soak any of them, I figure you'd have already done it if you were going to do it. I'd not soak one for a long time, I think that a long soak might degrade the front some. |
#21
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WOW! funny replies indeed.
normal cold tap water, soak over night or for 2 days comes out great. You should see my near E122 set I got from Luckey auctions out of the scrapbook! |
#22
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Hey folks, I just won this 1912 Imperial C46. Take a look at the scans at the bottom of the listing. Will soaking work for me?
http://www.ebay.com/itm/1912-Imperia...item27c89e47c2 Last edited by Bocabirdman; 07-10-2012 at 06:22 PM. Reason: I cannot type worth a..... |
#23
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yes, soak in tap water over night, damp dry and then roll the creases out. Put in between a paper towel or cloth and let dry completely
You will never know it was wet dan |
#24
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Dan...So did I do OK for $15?
Last edited by Bocabirdman; 07-10-2012 at 06:31 PM. |
#25
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Soooo... I searched for a thread on soaking V61's and came across this. No one seemed to really answer back in 2012 whether they had successfully soaked a V61 with the glossy front, so I thought I'd bring it up again. Any success? What did you do (how long, etc.)?
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