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#1
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Happy Easter friends!
Just had a question to help me understand you guys better as buyers. When you are shopping for vintage to add to your collection or resell, how important is centering to you? Would you buy a lower grade card with nice centering and presentation, vs. a higher grade card with better corners and surface, but with worse centering? Personally, bad centering kills a card to me...just bothers me so much on most cards |
#2
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For me, by far the most important aspect of a card is the surface. I care more about the image on the card than anything else. I avoid cars with significant "snow" or and print issues on the face of player, and seek out cards with strong color and registration/focus.
Next important is centering. I find that if a card is centered well from left to right, that it is more important than top to bottom. I think this is because some cards (think '54 Topps) don't even have a top border, so it doesn't seem unnatural to me to have a small top (or even bottom) border. Next important is corners, and last is edges. |
#3
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#4
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I have centering OCD so that along with registration and color are the most important factors to me. Add those three together and you get "eye appeal", like this.
_ Last edited by Casey2296; 04-18-2022 at 11:12 AM. |
#5
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Centering and image quality must be there for me to buy a card. Corners are a factor that ideally brings down the price for me. I’ll pay a hefty premium for centering/image on a card that is rarely centered, but hate paying for corners lol.
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#6
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As close as I can get to centered the better. And that depends on the set too. Some sets, you are just going to get close, and close is better than falling off one edge of a card. That is where I will pass on a card or replace it if it is in my sets. Needless to say, all of them have been replaced.
Diamond cuts are a pass too or a filler until I find a better specimen as well. Cheers, B. T.
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“Man proposes and God disposes.” U.S. Grant, July 1, 1885 Completed: 1969 - 2000 Topps Baseball Sets and Traded Sets. Senators and Frank Howard fan. I collect Topps baseball variations -- I can quit anytime I want to.....I DON'T WANT TO. |
#7
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This is the way.
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Bought from: orioles93, JK, Chstrite, lug-nut, Bartholomew_Bump_Bailey, IgnatiusJReilly, jb67, dbfirstman, DeanH3, wrm, Beck6 Sold to: Sean1125, sayitaintso, IgnatiusJReilly, hockeyhockey, mocean, wondo, Casey2296, Belfast1933, Yoda, Peter_Spaeth, hxcmilkshake, kaddyshack, OhioCardCollector, Gorditadogg, Jay Wolt, ClementeFanOh, JollyElm, EddieZ, 4reals, uyu906 |
#8
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Centering is vital when I consider buying a card- Trent King
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#9
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It is the first thing that jumps out to me. Next would be surface, then corners
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#10
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Very little in terms of my appreciation of the card, but I'm aware of what effect centering has for other collectors so I factor it into what I'm willing to bid.
My understanding is that the aesthetic preference for symmetry in objects is probably just a side effect of evolved adaptations for preferring mates with more symmetrical faces, and I'm happy not to be beholden to that side effect when I can save some money on a card I want to keep in my long-term personal collection. |
#11
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This is the way; I can open up my Zion cases with a smile, as I flip through each row of nice looking old cards. I am a Pre-War bottom feeder (Raw, 1's, 2's, etc,) but it does count; even at these low depths. Ben "I love baseball history backstory; especially when it involves cards." Last edited by benge610; 04-17-2022 at 09:43 AM. Reason: more fluff came to mind |
#12
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Centering is a factory flaw and as such is not a very big factor. Hell, some T206 people will give massive premiums for oc cards. Handling AFTER a card leaves the factory means much more. Creasing is a major factor for me and paper loss, residue, pin holes or writing is a deal breaker. So bring me your 90/10 and gum stained stars!
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#13
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Personally, I generally buy on eye appeal and one of the biggest components, if not the biggest for me, is centering. I will take a small flaw or two, but centering is what my eyes focus on. And of course with many cards I/we collect we have to take what we can find (hence the beater thread).
I really like cards with somewhat of a wow factor, so to speak... They have to be paid up for but I don't think I have ever regretted it.
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 04-17-2022 at 10:04 AM. |
#14
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To me, bad centering or poor focus is a defect in the card at birth in the factory. I want the card as it was intended by design: centered and focused. In contrast, in terms of corners, the card was intended to be handled by young people; hence some corner wear has always felt totally acceptable to me.
Last edited by MattyC; 04-17-2022 at 10:05 AM. |
#15
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As others have already stated superior color and registration is key when I'm looking for a card.
In regards to centering, its very important to me as well. Although I have a little bit of tolerance when it comes to top to bottom centering, side to side centering must be close to near perfect. |
#16
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I judge a card on five broad categories. The following is my order of preference:
Print Quality - (Registration/focus/color, etc.) Surface - (how clean and free from damage are the surfaces) Centering Edges Corners Notable is the fact that extreme examples of extremely poor centering or print quality appeal to me, too. I enjoy seeing two (or more) images on the same card.
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Eric Perry Currently collecting: T206 (135/524) 1956 Topps Baseball (195/342) "You can observe a lot by just watching." - Yogi Berra |
#17
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Depends on the series. If it’s a series that is near impossible to find a card of, or if it’s “that” player, I am willing to overlook things that I would not overlook in a more prevalent card or series. Here’s an example of a card I’m just happy to have one, regardless of it’s flaws:
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Ed Collecting PCL, Southern Association, and type cards. http://hangingjudgesports.com |
#18
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Come join me over on the dark side. Some may call them off-center, while others might call them miscut. I just call them cards.
WARNING! Do not look at the below cards if you know it will spoil your day. Brian |
#19
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Sometimes, it's just for the special personality of the thang! Ben |
#20
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For me, it's:
centering >>> surface/registration > edges > corners |
#21
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I like centered cards, but how much it matters really depends on all other attributes of a card, particularly its beauty and registration. I find lots of eye appeal in some cards that aren’t perfectly centered. Creases however always disturb me, and i prefer off-center with great registration to creased, weathered and well-centered. Here are a few cards which i cherish despite the fact that they arent centered better (every thread needs some cards!):
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#22
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My opinion will not be revealed here. Who cares?
Everyone has an opinion and is entitled to it. If centering was all that mattered, we would not need TPGs so I guess that's a good thing.
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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 |
#23
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A somewhat well-centered 51 Mantle in a PSA 4 sold for $48k last night on PWCC. Off-centered copies go for around $20k right now. Last edited by Snowman; 04-17-2022 at 11:32 AM. |
#24
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I was watching that one as well. However the various factors we've all noted in this thread come together to create eye appeal, if that eye appeal is there relative to examples in the same and higher grades, the buyers/collectors will certainly bid accordingly these days. In this respect, despite a lot of the... let's just say potentially annoying aspects of the hobby these days, it seems that the concept of "buying the card, not the holder" is as strong or stronger than it has ever been.
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#26
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For me it is a combination of things.
First is availability. I like cards that are a little more rare and I cannot control when the card becomes available and as a result I then need to decide if the card available is something I want/need/ cannot wait for the next one. Second is eye appeal specifically the front is the priority over the back Third is center and how it’s borders look Fourth is what I can afford for what I am trying to purchase
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Thanks all Jeff Kuhr https://www.flickr.com/photos/144250058@N05/ Looking for 1920 Heading Home Ruth Cards 1920s Advertising Card Babe Ruth/Carl Mays All Stars Throwing Pose 1917-20 Felix Mendelssohn Babe Ruth 1921 Frederick Foto Ruth Rare early Ruth Cards and Postcards Rare early Joe Jackson Cards and Postcards 1910 Old Mills Joe Jackson 1914 Boston Garter Joe Jackson 1911 Pinkerton Joe Jackson |
#27
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Leon, beefy borders on that red Cy. And always been a fan of that Ted Williams; if not mistaken you landed that on the BST board? Exceptional and rare centering for that card. |
#28
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For PreWW2 cards, centering is not much of a consideration. When being picky, good registration and great color are the two qualities that are at the top of my list, and I definitely dislike any surface damage/creasing etc. to the player's face. These E90-1 cards are good examples of what would certainly pass my physical exam, centered or not.
Brian |
#29
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Depends on the era.
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Items for sale or trade here UPDATED 3-16-18 |
#30
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564. Centerrifical Force
The way your eyes immediately tell you if a card is rightfully centered enough for you personally, independent of what other collectors or TPGs may think. Seemingly 90% of the graded cards (post-war) I buy have OC qualifiers, but the vast majority of those are ones than no 'normal' collector would've called off-centered in the days before TPGs ruined ( ![]() (All of this is thrown out the window with the 1972 Topps set, though, because I hope to assemble a nice one as close to perfectly centered as possible.)
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All the cool kids love my YouTube Channel:
Elm's Adventures in Cardboard Land ![]() https://www.youtube.com/@TheJollyElm Looking to trade? Here's my bucket: https://www.flickr.com/photos/152396...57685904801706 “I was such a dangerous hitter I even got intentional walks during batting practice.” Casey Stengel Spelling "Yastrzemski" correctly without needing to look it up since the 1980s. Overpaying yesterday is simply underpaying tomorrow. ![]() |
#31
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#32
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I need a solid image and registration for Prewar. Centering would come next. Some staining and creasing can give a Prewar card some character in my opinion. For Postwar, centering definitely comes first. Many Prewar are rare in general, but Postwar with perfect centering are rare too, which I’d need in buying a high priced Postwar card.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
#33
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Centering in my PC is pretty important to me. Just because I like them to look the best they can for my favorite players.
But on set builds I love having lots of different cuts and variation. It's more fun to look at to me. I like the natural look of how cards would've come out of a pack for one kid vs another back in the day.
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I have done deals with many of the active n54ers. Sometimes I sell cool things that you don't see every day. My Red Schoendienst collection- https://imageevent.com/lucas00/redsc...enstcollection Last edited by Lucas00; 04-17-2022 at 04:10 PM. |
#34
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It's everything for me
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Join my Cracker Jack group on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/crac...rdsmarketplace https://www.collectorfocus.com/collection/ajohnson39 *Proudest hobby accomplishment: finished (and retired) the 1914 Cracker Jack set currently ranked #12 all-time |
#35
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100% agree with this.
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#36
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It depend on the card for me. 50's to 70's I Chase centering. The print quality is typically decent for those years and the cards are more numerous than people realize. What separates the cards in collectability and makes them special is often times centering. Finding a perfectly centered 1979 Ozzie Smith sets it apart from the high volume of off centered cards. Prior to 1950 I really go after print quality and color over centering.
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#37
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The single most important aspect of the card to me.
I won’t even open an auction with a an OC qualifier in the description and in well over several hundred thousand cards I don’t believe I own a single graded card with a OC qualifier. Here’s the odd part, I am an error collector though, so if a very significant amount of the card next to the subject is showing I will pay a premium. It makes no sense and I am very comfortable with that.
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- Justin D. Player collecting - Lance Parrish, Jim Davenport, John Norlander. Successful B/S/T with - Highstep74, Northviewcats, pencil1974, T2069bk, tjenkins, wilkiebaby11, baez578, Bocabirdman, maddux31, Leon, Just-Collect, bigfish, quinnsryche...and a whole bunch more, I stopped keeping track, lol. |
#38
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Centering is important to me mainly because it has recently become important to other collectors. It didn't used to be that important.
We kids who grew up with '70s and '80s Topps realized that when you busted a pack you would get a certain fraction of cards that were off-centered or even miscut. No big deal. The off-centered cards were just as valuable as the 50-50 ones. Fast forward. Centering has become a huge issue. |
#39
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I like side to side centering to be as good as possible but it depends on how tough the card is to find. The rarer the item is on my want list the more tolerable I am but still with the hopes of upgrading later.
Here are some of my best centered examples ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
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Looking for Lou Criger items please contact me My collection here:https://imageevent.com/joejo20 |
#40
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I don't really worry much about condition on its own, especially centering.
To me it's the overall look, combined with the price. A worn card I like priced at a worn card price (Or less if I'm lucky) is fine. A worn card at a premium price? not for me. |
#41
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[QUOTE=J
Here’s the odd part, I am an error collector though, so if a very significant amount of the card next to the subject is showing I will pay a premium. It makes no sense and I am very comfortable with that.[/QUOTE] ....we need to talk ....... .... |
#42
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I pay more for a card with terrible centering.
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#43
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I'm in the opposite camp as centering isn't that important to me as long as the card isn't horribly miscut. I prefer the card to look more "pack fresh" than centered, and I always hope to pick up good deals where some collectors reject the card because it's too off-centered for them. Here are a couple of examples.
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#44
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__________________
Thanks all Jeff Kuhr https://www.flickr.com/photos/144250058@N05/ Looking for 1920 Heading Home Ruth Cards 1920s Advertising Card Babe Ruth/Carl Mays All Stars Throwing Pose 1917-20 Felix Mendelssohn Babe Ruth 1921 Frederick Foto Ruth Rare early Ruth Cards and Postcards Rare early Joe Jackson Cards and Postcards 1910 Old Mills Joe Jackson 1914 Boston Garter Joe Jackson 1911 Pinkerton Joe Jackson |
#45
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A quickly emerging theme here seems to be that centering is a priority if the goal is resale.
If your goal is collecting then off center can be a good opportunity to score a deal on a better card. |
#46
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.
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#47
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For me, centering is the one trait of a card that I get hung up on for whatever reason. With that said, I know some sets just seem to have a knack for not being centered so I just try and get the best looking one I can get.
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#48
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Centering is the number one most important factor when I buy cards. This is part of the reason why I've never been much of a set collector as it's painstakingly tough to pull together 300+ cards with 55/45 or better centering for a vintage set.
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#49
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I'm quite sure at this point that the forum's opinion on centering is a key factor for the "card doctors'" financial success in cahoots with the TPGs.
Crack, snip, snip and resubmit. Footnote: I believe this is the first time I have ever used or seen '" used consecutively in the same sentence
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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 |
#50
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+1 must be a Brian thing....
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