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#1
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Posted By: barrysloate
I'm back from our long awaited hobby meeting and am happy to say it was both enjoyable and productive. First, I want to thank Jim Crandell for providing a warm gathering place on a frigid night, as well as for the pizza and refreshments. Besides Jim and myself, attendees included Doug Allen, Dave Forman, Al Crisafulli, Frank Evanov, Dan Gantt, Michael Sarno, and Keith Thompson (grand nephew of HOFer Sam Thompson). |
#2
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Posted By: Cobby33
Barry- Thank you for the insightful summary of the gathering and for defining, at the outset, who "we" are. |
#3
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Posted By: Matt Bojorquez
Barry, |
#4
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Did the subject of Mastro "preparing" cards for grading come up at all? |
#5
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Posted By: Frank Evanov
"Did the subject of Mastro "preparing" cards for grading come up at all?" |
#6
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Posted By: barrysloate
Matt- yes I did bring that up to Doug, and he said while Derek Grady and Kevin Struss look at virtually every significant card closely, it is almost impossible for them to examine every card from every bulk lot. Admittedly, the ones I am referring to originate from large lots of T and E cards that I usually go after, as hopefully they will result in some break value. I don't think that gives them a free pass to overgrade, and they should be more diligent, but Doug's answer was fair and I guess I too have to look at the lots more closely (tougher to do from a scan than in person). |
#7
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
the same type of restoration work done on Jay Miller's Keeler cabinet would not normally happen to a card that would eventually be graded......am I safe in saying that? |
#8
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Posted By: MVSNYC
barry- well written... |
#9
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Posted By: barrysloate
Yes Michael, it was a nice group that seemed to get along and work together well. Frank emailed and said we should really try to get everyone together for a social evening or dinner, but dare I start a new thread without getting laughed out of town? |
#10
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
that make you go hmmm....... |
#11
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Posted By: barrysloate
I take it that Tom doesn't believe an honest answer would have been forthcoming...perhaps he is correct, but I think Doug would have explained the reasoning behind it. |
#12
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Posted By: barrysloate
I have just received the following message from Doug Allen with regard to the Willie Keeler cabinet that was previously cited: to paraphrase, it is the policy of Mastro Auctions to send items out for restoration or cleaning if they are deemed to be pieces of memorabilia, such as vintage photography, and that this restoration will be disclosed. It is not the company's policy to send baseball cards out for restoration under any circumstances. |
#13
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
I think it was David who once mentioned out here that it is the norm for pictures and other pieces of art to be restored and that no one cries about it as we do with regard to baseball cards. (As a collector of antique posters, I do know this to be the case) What do you think are the reasons that we feel so much differently about baseball cards? |
#14
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
because grading companies won't grade a restored card anything but "Authentic". If the grading companies gave a numerical grade to restored cards it would become "okay" to do it. |
#15
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Dan, you don't think that collectors felt that way about restored cards prior to the advent of third party grading? |
#16
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Posted By: barrysloate
A possible answer, but not necessarily the whole answer: in the case of vintage posters, because they are so large and brittle, it is a near certainty that they will need some kind of restoration, so it has become an accepted practice. With cards, they have generally survived over the years with nothing more than natural wear, so collectors expect them to remain as is. I know there is more to it, and certainly the advent of the slab has made card restoration taboo. |
#17
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I'm not exactly sure Jeff, but I do know that many of the oldtimers used to trim their cards to fit into plastic holders and sheets....that I believe was a time when cards were collected for what they were....cards and not commodities. I don't think it would have been a problem to restore a card before the 1980s which is when I think the investment side of the hobby really kicked in. |
#18
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Barry, your points make sense: without restoration entire groups of 'art' might be lost, unlike baseball cards. And Dan, I agree as well. I wonder how much damn money the PSAs and SGCs of the world have cost all of us.... |
#19
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
I don't know about that. |
#20
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Posted By: Gilbert Maines
Jeff: |
#21
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
I didn't feel that an honest answer WOULDN'T be forthcoming. I've ALWAYS found Doug to be very forthcoming--especially given his responses to more than a few threads posted here. I just found it odd that that specific situation wasn't brought up by anyone in the meeting as I believe it was outlined in the thread about the meeting. I guess more of the people at that meeting were specifically geared towards cards that it didn't really become an issue. |
#22
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Posted By: Joe Jones
If cards were restored to look new or near mint, what would that do to the value of the "true survivor" cards? How would you determine which have been restored and which have survived? |
#23
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Posted By: barrysloate
Tom- it was an oversight and it never crossed my mind, and with ten people there (one actually asked to remain anonymous) you would have thought someone would think of it. But Doug is willing to discuss it and you can call him. |
#24
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Posted By: Kevin
"One of the things we realize that is missing today is either a book or comprehensive article that can educate collectors more in this area" |
#25
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Posted By: barrysloate
Hi Kevin- first off, welcome to the board! |
#26
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Posted By: peter chao
Barry, Guys |
#27
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Posted By: Dave
Barry S....if you get a chance please check your email sir. |
#28
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Posted By: barrysloate
Peter- Doug actually asked Dave Forman a very interesting question, and that is would SGC consider putting some kind of indelible mark on every altered card that crosses their desk? Dave said of course he couldn't, because it is not his property. |
#29
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I'm not aware that vintage photo collectors are much more accepting of restoration. I think if |
#30
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Although it was nice to see Al and Manny and Mike and Dave and Frank again and to meet others in the hobby, I came away from our meeting a little disappointed. |
#31
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Posted By: Jeff Lichtman
Jim, thanks for your honesty. |
#32
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Posted By: JK
Someone above stated that Dave Foreman said he could not put some sort of mark on a card to show that it had passed sgc's eyes once before and that Dave responded that he could not do so because its not his card. This is really not correct. All any grading company would need to do is put in its service terms that by submitting a card, you consent to such a mark being placed on the card. I suspect that the reason no grading compnay has done so falls into one of three reasons:(1) technology (2) cost to the consumer or (3) it would cost them money - either due to people not submitting because they dont want to consent to such a "scarlet letter" being placed on their cards, or because it would greatly reduce the number of resubmissions. |
#33
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Posted By: barrysloate
I agree with Josh that if only one grading company marked an altered card and the others didn't, it would significantly hurt their business. And I do agree with Dave that you can't accept a card from someone and then take the liberty of marking it up. |
#34
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Barry, |
#35
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Posted By: barrysloate
Well, this forum is the best place I can think of to kick this thing around. Does anybody have an idea how we as collectors and dealers can form an organization that would put an end to the work done by card doctors? |
#36
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Barry, |
#37
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Posted By: joe D.
The real reason the grading companies do not put a marking on cards is a simple one..... |
#38
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jim- I just want to say that I don't believe you will be attacked by anyone on this thread, and I suggest that this is the best place for a discussion, and as such, I request no personal attacks allowed here. |
#39
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Posted By: barrysloate
Jim- if dealers and collectors were to get together and form an organization, what would you expect them to do collectively to prevent altered cards from reaching the market? |
#40
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Barry, |
#41
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Posted By: barrysloate
Leon- to facilitate this discussion publicly, would you agree to force anyone who goes into personal attack mode to sit in the corner with their face to the wall for the rest of the day (and no TV for a week!)? |
#42
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Posted By: leon
I doubt you will be personally attacked for wanting to better the hobby. I think the attacking comes when anyone is condescending to others....Also, I think it's a no win situation as far as an association goes. I would give the analogy of gun control. It mainly keeps guns away from honest people. The bad guys still have them. As Barry said if there is an association the good guys will join and the bad ones will continue doing what they do. I don't even want to get into the "what's acceptable to do to a card" debate. The majority of folks, on this board, don't think removing a pencil mark is wrong.....but some do...so it will never be 100% agreement on anything. I applaud you for trying to better the hobby but honestly I have had this sneaking suspicion the whole time that you are more worried about bad cards in PSA 8 holders, in your collection, than anything else. I am not saying I wouldn't feel the same way if I only collected high grade but still one has to consider motives when viewing things being done. Maybe you would have this same ambition if you were only collecting pr-vg but it would seem most of those folks aren't quite as concerned......I know I am not...Personally I don't care if every single PSA 8,9,10 were altered. It wouldn't affect me at all....Might the values of my cards go down? Sure, but again, I don't really do it for the money (and I am not saying that I don't like to see assets go up in value, of course I do)....best regards... |
#43
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
the nail more on the head with the high grade aspect of it. And....I don't think I've attacked you although I have shown a little too much tongue-in-cheek sarcasm and for that I do apologize..... |
#44
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Posted By: T206Collector
First, this Board is a collector's alliance. |
#45
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Leon, |
#46
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Posted By: Jerry Spillman
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#47
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Posted By: T206Collector
...and without speaking for all low to mid-grade collectors, I would not be "happy" with "restoration being done to [my] cards." I just happen to think that a collection which resides in an SGC holder is -- and for the foreseeable future will be -- the highest standard available to protect collectors. |
#48
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
So Mastro's official response to removing creases is "No comment"? |
#49
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Posted By: Jason L
regarding the meeting last week, does your disappointment stem from the level of apathy you are perceiving, or was everyone in agreement with you on the need for action, but lack of ideas/commitment on how to proceed? Did you expect to come out of the meeting with an action plan? perhaps the others weren't ready for that after only the first meeting? |
#50
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Posted By: JimCrandell
I appreciate Doug's effort to come and contribute but I was stunned that he refused to comment on the area of most interest from his famous post and the event that started this whole discussion.. I even asked him a second time but he said he did not want to talk about it that night. |
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