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#1
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Posted By: scott
as a newbie to the hobby specializing in e cards ,i've noticed that the percentage of caramel cards in midgrade or higher is significantly less then t cards.is this observation correct or is it just the scarcity of one to the other?if so ,why? |
#2
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
is that the adults were using the tobacco and not really 'playing' with the cards, while the kids were the ones buying the candy/caramels and they weren't taking as good of care of the cards as the adults........ |
#3
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Posted By: JimB
Your observation is absolutely correct. E cards are infinitely more difficult to find in high grade than mainstream T cards like T-206. Some T sets also have factors that make them difficult in high grade like T204 and T205 with their gold borders (T204s are also very thin). There are several factors that account for this. One is just that E cards are a lot less plentiful that T206s. I would imagine there are close to 100x as many examples of any given T206 than any E card. If this rough approximation is anywhere near correct, then statistically there would one high-grade E card for every 100 high grade T206. The other major factor is that E cards were packaged with caramel. Aside from producing stains, E cards were mostly handled by kids who were a lot less careful with their cards in general than the adults who got cards out of cigarette packs. When an e-card survives in high grade, it is a near miracle. |
#4
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Posted By: John
There is no doubt that e-cards (most) are scarcer than the larger mainstream T-sets. Jim is right it also has a lot to do with who produced the sets. Many of the E-sets were regional issues vs. national issues making them far less produced. If T206’s were only made and distributed in Lancaster PA for example we would be saying that we could not find nice T206’s. |
#5
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Posted By: identify7
I believe that adults are more likely to toss cards into a cigar box and look at them occasionally, while kids are more likely to keep them in their pockets to play flipping, pitching and other games with the cards. |
#6
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Posted By: robert a
I remember talking to someone about how many adults likely opened their tobacco product and threw the card(s) in the street. They might have been picked up by kids eventually, but most adults probably just needed a smoke and not a card. |
#7
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Posted By: tbob
An example is the E98 set where you can find SGC 50s and 60s as the highest graded examples of a particular card and only a couple have graded that high. |
#8
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Posted By: Anson
Hey, I'm an adult and I like caramel as much as any kid. |
#9
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
In fact, I had to get rid of my PSA 5 E98 Evers, b/c it didn't look real next to all my others (SGC 40's and below)! |
#10
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Posted By: Colt McClelland
My personal opinion (as someone who has been collecting E cards for a while) is that the "condition" scarcity issue is much less of an issue than the basic scarcity issue (i.e. scarcity regardless of condition) when it comes to E cards vs. T cards. There are certainly high graded E cards out there. We don't see them very often, but we don't see a lot of E cards very often in any grade. The bottom line (imo) is that E cards in general are much more scarce than T cards, and it logically follows that high grade E cards are much more scarce than high grade T cards. I really don't think it has anything to do with who collected/discarded/etc. any of these cards back in the day. I just think that E cards are much more scarce than T cards in general, and therefore high grade E cards are much more scarce than high grade T cards. I think the number of cards we see on ebay day in and day out supports this. |
#11
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Posted By: Anonymous
I agree with the fact that most adults threw away the cards. My late uncle said he used to pick up a ton of T cards from the subway floor after rush hour in Boston - smoking was more important than cards! |
#12
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Posted By: BcD
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#13
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Posted By: Josh K.
ohh, I want that matty |
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