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#1
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Posted By: jay behrens
did t210s get so popular? When I first started my player set, I used to be able to pick these up fairly reasonable and usually only had to worry about dugnkel bidding against me. Now I see at 5 people from the board bidding on these cards. Guess I will have to wait awhile before I am able to add anymore of these to my collection. |
#2
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Posted By: Brian McQueen
What exactly in Prewar cards ISN'T popular right now? I'm not saying I'm going to start collecting it or trying to draw attention to certain things, but it seems that everything I'm collecting is magically "on fire" right now. And I've seen enough threads from other collectors like this to make me think that it's not just stuff I'm interested in and that really pretty much about everything Prewar is starting to dry up. |
#3
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Posted By: jay behrens
I'd tend to agree with that. Even those wretched MP&Co cards are pulling down silly prices. The only things I'm picking up at decent prices are things like Goudey wide pens, Exhibits and other cards that are "larger" than normal. Even Kashins are starting to get expensive. |
#4
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Posted By: warshawlaw
1. Anything I post for sale |
#5
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Posted By: Bryan Long
Everything pre-war if on fire. It almost seems that the first ebay days brought to light all these cards and now more collectors are showing up and the prices have gone through the roof on just about everything. This is why I am seeling some of my post-war cards on ebay right now. The prices have never been higher. But the pre-war market I think is starting to dry up - that is why everyone should sell me their Cobb cards at a decent price we so I can keep a stock pile for the group |
#6
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Posted By: robert a
C46 isn't bad. It's still reasonable to collect. |
#7
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Posted By: jay behrens
Contentnea has NOTHING to draw it to the set other than a few players that made it to majors and no one of significance like Stengle and JAckson in the Old Mill set. Yet these card prices are right up there with Old Mills and I see the same bidding on those cards as Old Mills. |
#8
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Posted By: Bob Marquette
I started collecting T210s because it is a huge set and there have been a lot of them on ebay and I like the red borders and nice black and white glossy pictures. They are not everyone's cup of tea but what else are you going to collect if you've already completed T205, 206 (minus Big 4), T207 and the some of the caramel card sets? Many of the other sets like E107 are too expensive and too elusive, so I think that is why a lot of collectors have moved after the 210s. The 201s and 202s are not my cup of tea so unless I stumble on a hoard of Ramlys or another find of Coupon cards, it looks like 210s and Zeenuts will be offering opportunities in the future. (I have also noticed a lot of T209s being offered lately so I think the same rationale applies to them as to the T210s). |
#9
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Actually, I have been outbid a lot more than typical in the past on the prewar stuff I collect. It is all very hot right now. If I was a true arbitrager, I would trade off as much of the appreciated prewar stuff as I could for as many of the "cold" postwar tough issues as I could find. After all, collectors who are priced out of the old stuff will move to other cards to get their fixes. |
#10
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Posted By: robert a
We've been chatting a little lately on the board about m116 and how hot it's been compared to years ago. |
#11
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Posted By: Bob Marquette
Yes, I agree with you, I think the cat is out of the bag on the M116s. That set is going to really take off soon in my opinion. The problem I (and others trying to complete the set) have is two-fold: 1) You run in to HOF collectors who drive the prices up on the HOFers not because they are M116s but because they are HOFers and 2) Despite what anyone says, there are about 30-40 300 series back cards that are damn impossible to find. I have lucked in to some but that last 10-15 are NEVER for sale anywhere! I am hoping someone has a few at the National. It is amazing how you are beginning to see some of the very tough T207 scarcities pop up from time to time on ebay but the M116 rarities remain invisible. I also think it is interesting (sometimes painfully so) that some of the "commons" sell for so much simply because they are on every Sporting Life collectors want list. |
#12
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Posted By: jay behrens
I guess I should have said t209s have nothing foing for it player-wise. I love the b&w set. Lots of great photos. There just aren't any significant players in the set to draw someone to it. |
#13
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Posted By: Brian McQueen
Something that I've started doing a little more of is, instead of going for an entire set of something, I'll just go after a particular subset, team or series within the larger set. For instance, since there are hordes of t206 and t205 collectors out there now, instead of starting to try to acquire hordes of those blindly, I've decided to just go for t205 minor leaguers and t206 players from Kansas City. t210s and m116s can both be split up into the individual series they were produced within as well. Smaller projects like these save me from going after hundreds of cards I really have no interest in while still providing that "thrill of the chase" flavor that appeals to us set-collectors. In addition to diversifying my collection, it's also one less person in the market for all the other cards which does my part in keeping prices down since I won't be bidding on them |
#14
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Now the only sets I collect are the ones I loved as a kid. |
#15
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Posted By: Patrick McMenemy
Hi Jay: |
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