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#1
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![]() ![]() I see a Ton of 1950's Cards that are "Tattered" on at least one side. It seems like this is a 50's thing as I rarely see it in Cards from other Decades. But my question is why do they grade so high? I mean it looks terrible and I would never buy one. But I see people paying big money for PSA 9 Tattered Cards. To me I don't think they should grade higher than a 2-3. I mean it is Clearly NOT a Mint Card. Here is an example I found on ebay of a 1953 Topps Bob Feller. Seller Claims it is Near Mint (What !!!!!!) Last edited by that T206 Guy; 03-31-2020 at 02:22 PM. |
#2
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I find it to be an attractive card. The "rough cut" doesn't bother me one bit. And less likely to be trimmed! I assume you are new to vintage collecting?
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Rich@rd Lap@int |
#3
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I have dabbled in it on and off for a couple decades but I like T206 and Older stuff more so I don't do much with 1950's stuff. Last edited by that T206 Guy; 03-31-2020 at 02:39 PM. |
#4
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How can they get a PSA Mint 9 Grade when the Edges are not Razor Sharp?
If I look at a PSA 9 from any other Decade it will be Razor Sharp but I see a ton of PSA 9 Tattered 1950's Cards. Makes no sense to me. Last edited by that T206 Guy; 03-31-2020 at 02:43 PM. |
#5
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Some cards had rough factory cuts. I like them...
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#6
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Unfortunately the collector must even beware of rough cuts. The card doctors (especially Moser) can replicate these rough cut edges to a tee, and PSA passes them routinely with numerical grades.
Educate yourself, and be careful. |
#7
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It's because the cards were cut with wires instead of long blades during many of those year (and especially on OPC). They are referred to as "rough cuts" and are how the cards come straight out of the packs. If the edges are smooth on many of those sets, you can assume that they've been tampered with or "sheet cut."
Although you don't like them, the fact that those are natural to the issue allows them to achieve high grades. And until it was shown that card doctors can also trim cards to look "rough cut", they were thought to be a sign the card wasn't trimmed. But you can see on the Blowout forums that many sets with rough cuts were trimmed and then re-roughed up in order to make the look natural. One the sets this was done to and detected on is the 1952 Topps Look-N-See set.
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-- PWCC: The Fish Stinks From the Head PSA: Regularly Get Cheated BGS: Can't detect trimming on modern SGC: Closed auto authentication business JSA: Approved same T206 Autos before SGC Oh, what a difference a year makes. |
#8
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Yes they did. Even the 1979 OPC Ozzie Smith RC is found rough cut about half the time. That doesn't bother most collectors, but centering does bother a lot of them.
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#9
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Every Duke Snider rookie card has a rough cut on it's left side. This is because he was printed on the left-most edge of the 36-card
sheet. The point is that certain cards were factory cut as such. Just like the right side of the 1953 TOPPS Feller which you posted. ![]() TED Z T206 Reference . Last edited by tedzan; 03-31-2020 at 06:55 PM. Reason: Corrected typo. |
#10
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Doesn't matter how they came from the factory.
They are still NOT Mint. I mean if somebody dropped the cards at the factory and they got dinged PSA are going to grade them accordingly. They are not going to say well its Mint besides the ding but that happened at the factory so we will grade it a 9. |
#11
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If I had a card like that it would drive me nuts. Centering is the most important thing to me unless the picture is out of focus or fadded or something major like that. |
#12
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#14
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#15
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Also, it cheapens the value of a PSA 9 that is sharp. So you have two cards with the same grade that are not the same. Maybe they should add a qualifier like they do with OC Cards? |
#16
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What's your thoughts on deckle edge cards? ![]()
__________________
52 Topps cards. https://www.flickr.com/photos/144160280@N05/ http://www.net54baseball.com/album.php?albumid=922 |
#17
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#18
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Perhaps you’re giving way too much credit to the viability of the TPGs. There are more discrepancies within their grading systems than you can count on both hands.
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#19
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Feller was double printed on the sheet, thus two card positions, one presumably with the common rough cut edge, the other without.
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#20
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I love the rough cut on some 1950's cards. I'd actually put a premium on it.
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#21
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Rough cuts are like redheads...some people just don't dig 'em. Others can't get enough of 'em. Most collectors have no gray area with rough cuts.
__________________
http://https://www.ebay.com/str/bantyredtobacco |
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