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#1
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Can't help but pick up these color oddities when I see them!
Here are my four favorites: T206 Schlei (Portrait), E102 Kleinow, B18 Otto Miller (Blue Infield), and E92 Harry Bemis. I have included the "normal" examples for comparison. Patrick |
#2
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A favorite of mine.
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#3
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Oh man oh man oh man. Where do I even begin with this....
I've been hunting these sort of oddities down for a couple decades now. If you saw my post in the recent REA pickup thread, you might recall me saying that discovering a new color variation / oddity is my absolute favorite part of the hobby. I suppose I'll start with "Color vs. B&W" variations. As in, here are cards that should have color but instead turned up B&W.... m116mitchell-001.jpg lfFYPFCR3B.jpg lfRB8G0O9I.jpg Last edited by shammus; 02-10-2023 at 09:43 AM. |
#4
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And for good measure, here's a w572 that SHOULD be black and white but actually somehow got a good dose of red....
w572red.jpg Will try to dig out some more favorites later on today.... |
#5
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Salmon-colored T205 Speaker:
__________________
194/240 1933 Goudeys (Ruth #144, #149, Gehrig #92) 131/208 T205s 42/108? Diamond Stars |
#6
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Here is an 1910 Odbakdity. I like to call it my Color Missing Persons.
Brian (his one white collar also really causes me confusion) |
#7
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Here's 8 diff 1955 Armour coins Reynolds
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#8
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This is the only one I've seen that wasn't green.
__________________
Baseball cards will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no baseball cards.--The Fabulous Furry Freak Bros. (paraphrased) |
#9
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Here are some additional coloddities that were more resistant to having a new word coined for them. Featuring E90-1, T202 end panels, and the ever popular T206 red/orange dynamic duo.
Brian Last edited by brianp-beme; 02-10-2023 at 10:21 AM. Reason: sometimes less mores is more or less preferable |
#10
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For many years the weird colored cards were my favorite. Then I learned that 99.99% of cards that are missing yellow or red, the area that should be green is now blue, and the cards that should be red but are now orange are faded.
After I figured out how to tell the difference between faded and a real rare color variation my huge collection of oddballs turned into very few real non faded weird color variations. ![]() |
#11
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Orange instead of red (and the others) should sell for less, not more. It’s damage. |
#12
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Love this one...
__________________
Stuff I am looking for: https://www.oldbaseball.com/wantlist...wl_tag=jsyoung Stuff for sale or trade: https://imageevent.com/obcmac/itemsforsale |
#13
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And with the sun faded cards I've seen, all of the colors are affected. Yes, some more than others, but the entire card is noticeably faded. Another thought. If these oddities where due to glue, wouldn't we see more copies since so many cards from this area were stored in albums? Last edited by DeanH3; 02-10-2023 at 12:23 PM. |
#14
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Many of these cards had contact with glues and pastes along most or all of their backside. Some also cast an effect wider than the initial contact point, as I’ve seen in T cards I’ve yanked out of scrapbooks myself. There’s a reason we see the same effects recurring across issues that don’t make sense from a printing perspective. There are two kinds of light fade we see, one being the extreme sun damage that you see on the spine of a book that’s been a shelf facing the sun for 40 years. Those cards are faded everywhere. Red ink is also extremely susceptible to fading from light, and takes effect long before any other color is affected. This thread from a couple months ago has cards with the telltale signs that this is exactly what happened shown and broken down: https://www.net54baseball.com/showthread.php?t=328644 I love misprints and freaks and would love to believe. But the evidence all tells me these are not real. Debunking my own ‘misprints’ ain’t in my interest, but these really should not be bought and sold as if they are real when they aren’t. There are also nefarious ways to do this or speed up the process, some of which work quite reliably and a person with no background in chemicals and such can do. 90%+ of T and E cards sold as misprints did not leave the factory that way. |
#15
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Here are scans of the T206 orange Criger card I showed on a previous post.
Back damage, yes. Actual color variation, probably no. Still cool, yes! Brian |
#16
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https://net54baseball.com/showthread...ght=blue+aaron |
#17
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Vintage Topps green to blue and tobacco red to orange are the biggest red flags that you are not looking at an actual misprint. I still think they look cool, and when I get one that I do not believe to be the work of a doctor but to have happened naturally, I slot it into my set as an extra bonus card. |
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