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#51
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Frank wrote: |
#52
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Posted By: andy becker
i guess i am the strawman, or to quote reggie....perhaps i'm the straw that stirs the drink |
#53
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Posted By: Anonymous
How is removing glue,paper, or tobacco any different from removing a crease! Natural state of wear. WHat about all that glue and paper that was once on the card. That feels far worse than this. The card once had a huge chunk of glue and paper on the back and now it doesnt. A card once had a crease and now it doesnt. How is this right but the other is wrong. Doesnt feel right to me. If you say altering a card from its natural state is wrong. Then all of it is wrong! |
#54
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Posted By: Anonymous
Bump in a grade? What do you think removing paper or glue does to the grade!!! If you think removing glue or tape from a card is ok, then you must accept removing a crease. Its the same thing! |
#55
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Posted By: leon
The common thinking, by most but not all, is that if you take something off of a card that wasn't supposed to be there, and there are no remnants left behind, then it's ok. I agree and that is all I have ever done. Soaking and regular erasing of pencil marks are ok by me and I don't care if someone does it to a card I am buying. If I can't tell anything was done I don't care.....Not a purist attitude but a collector one.....imo.. |
#56
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Posted By: T206Collector
"If putting cards between books or in a hard case does that then I am against it." |
#57
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Posted By: Anonymous
But like they said, if you press out a crease and you cant tell it has been done. then is it ok? Removing something that wasnt suposed to be there. It was part of its journey to be placed in a scrap book. Like a crease. They both can be removed. No wear or glue was ever suposed to be there but they are. Natural state should stay. Even if in a book. All is wrong. I feel removing a card from paper is just as bad as anything |
#58
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Posted By: Anonymous
What if the card in question was once glued to an album. Then I soaked it and removed the glue. Which has been quoted as being acceptable. now while I did this the once crease that was 2 mm long vanished. What do you do now. Is the card now altered or just part of removing it from the album and restoring it to how it was suposed to be? Glue and paper free. |
#59
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Leon, |
#60
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Posted By: steve f
Peterose, You made your point several times. Your frequent responses may skew an honest tally. I'm interested in others posts. Please wait for other opinions to come in then criticize. Thanks. Steve F |
#61
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Most collectors I know - and I say most, not all - feel the way Leon does about soaking off paper and gunk. |
#62
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Posted By: leon
We'll see......see new thread poll....I think you are going to find it hard to believe....but maybe I have it all wrong....best regards...your friendly pot stirrer.... |
#63
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
I think I can articulate the basis for Al's position which seems similar to my own. Scrapbook material is EXTRA material, not part of the card, so if you can remove it without altering the surface of the card, then you are not really tampering with the card itself. However, a crease is something that affects the surface of a card and is presumably something acquired in its natural life, so removing a crease truly is altering a card to improve its condition by removing wear it has incurred. Does that make sense? |
#64
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Leon, |
#65
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
I wanted to make a comment on Leon's poll, specifically with respect to the removal of ink. |
#66
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Posted By: Anonymous
Yes I have, but I still havent heard anything about them. |
#67
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Peter: |
#68
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
Count me as one who is against all alterations. IMHO, is soaking tolerable--no. Is pressing tolerable--absolutely not. |
#69
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Posted By: martindl
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#70
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Todd, |
#71
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
I would say that there is a much more stated tolerance for doing things to a card now than previously. When I looked at the informal poll, it was running about 50-50 on whether soaking and removing marks was acceptable, maybe a little more toward acceptable. A couple of years or so ago, I believe it would have been about 20% in favor, 80% against, give or take. Maybe it was just that the stated opposition was more vocal back then, but I don't think so--I think if you studied the posts carefully, you'd see that some frequent posters then and now have changed positions. I know of one off the top of my head, but will not divulge his name either here or privately. It's not that big a deal, people of course can change their views over time, and who knows, maybe I remain the unenlightened one. I pass no judgments, I merely believe this board has become far more accepting of changes made to cards than it was a couple or few years back. |
#72
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Thanks Todd--puzzling to me why but thats what it is. |
#73
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Posted By: leon
I have to say that so far I am surprised at the poll. I thought it was heavily weighted towards my way of thinking...not that I will ever go with the flow just to go with it.....so, so far I am surprised....Maybe I was wrong? First time for everything....and btw, I don't see me changing my view on the subject.....as I did on the F vs E card thread.....best regards.....your servant... |
#74
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Posted By: JimCrandell
Leon, |
#75
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Posted By: John
I’m a little tossed up on this issue. I do find it funny though, or at least a little odd. |
#76
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
John I am not sure I see any inconsistency. My fear of high grade prewar cards is not that they have been soaked out of scrapbooks but that they have had wrinkles removed, or have had corners spooned out, or worse. When I was collecting high grade prewar I just saw too many cards that even to my eye (which is far less well-trained than most of the guys here) looked odd in one way or another (they were significantly short, the thickness disappeared at the corners when you looked at them sideways, etc. etc.). But for reasons stated I don't have a problem with soaking if its purpose and effect is just to remove extra material without degrading the surface of the card in any way. Although again, I have the highest respect for people with a more absolutist point of view, and as in anything in life once one moves away from an absolutist position it is hard to be perfectly consistent. |
#77
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Posted By: John
Peter well taken I understand. For the record I don’t collect ultra-high end either. But mostly because of that damn Powerball, how many tickets does a guy have to buy! |
#78
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
John, I definitely don't think so. |
#79
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
John, I would guess that any card that was handled enough to have been stuck in a scrapbook with glue or whatever substance would no longer have been NM/NT anyway even aside from the glue. I could very well be wrong on that, but my guess is the cards that have genuinely survived in that condition were more or less unhandled or stored in some other way. How's that for fighting the hypothetical? But that said, if a pristine or nearly pristine card was glued into a scrapbook, and retained its NM MT qualities otherwise, and you could get it out of the scrapbook and get the glue off just with water and leave the surface just as it was before, then I don't think that would trouble me really. |
#80
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
I think your Goudey example brings things into sharp focus. I wonder the various boardmembers' views if they each found a scrapbook page of beautiful goudeys, T-206s or whatever. |
#81
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Posted By: John
Al, well taken I respect your thoughts. |
#82
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
This is all very interesting and I'm not getting anything done at work. |
#83
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
I guess where I would part company with John is over the definition of alteration. Maybe it's just semantics, but I can see where removing extra material without degrading the surface could be considered something short of alteration. What, if fact, is "altered" in such a case? One can always posit absurd examples, but surely not even the most ardent anti restorationist would argue with blowing dust off a card before putting it into a holder. Now suppose it was something that you couldn't blow off but had to flick off with a fingernail. Alteration? To me paper removal with water is more on that spectrum than on the crease removal/spooning/trimming spectrum. |
#84
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Posted By: steve f
al·ter (ôltr) Pronunciation Key |
#85
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Posted By: T206Collector
...that turns on the disclosure element. |
#86
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Posted By: John
“I would like to make clear I’m not saying soaking & trimming are complete equals. Nor am I advocating either.” |
#87
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Posted By: John
One more question, from what we know. The method for soaking to remove glue & paper etc. is virtually the same, in which you would go about removing a crease correct? |
#88
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
To bring in elements of another thread, I don't think you can really remove a crease or wrinkle without adding pressure. I don't apply any pressure if I'm soaking a card - it's purely soaking and perhaps some rubbing. |
#89
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Posted By: T206Collector
If you soak without pressing the card will warp. You have to dry it between two pieces of paper and then beneath a stack of books (or something akin). |
#90
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Posted By: Al C.risafulli
Understood. |
#91
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
John not sure I understand the question, what is the reason the card is GD as opposed to NM, is is because it started off with glue and therefore really was only GD to begin with, or that a crease came back, or simply that the seller overgraded it? |
#92
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Posted By: T206Collector
"My experience has been that sticking a wet card inside a thick book will not [take out a wrinkle." |
#93
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
Suppose I took an identical card, graded for the sake of example 7 by any one of the major grading companies. I auction it on four different occasions. Hypo 1, I just give the grade and a scan. Hypo 2, I give the grade, a scan, and a glowing description. Hypo 3, I give the grade, the scan, the description, but add that I removed scrapbook material before submitting but it is now undetectable, as shown by the grade. Hypo 4, same as 3 except I add that I soaked and pressed out a small wrinkle before submitting but it is now undetectable, as shown by the grade. I would bet that especially if it was a desirable card, the prices in all four scenarios would not differ significantly. |
#94
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Posted By: leon
I agree and I would pay the same... which may not be the prevailing sentiment...but it's mine. To each their own.....heck, I've got better stuff to worry about than if my vintage card had something done to it that is totally unnoticeable.... |
#95
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Posted By: John
But were talking every day baseball cards, hell even the most elusive T206’s there are certainly more than one of. I would have to say you would see some price differences in those auction listings especially upon full discloser. I’m hoping that people would bid accordingly knowing that the only reason it’s a 7 is because someone worked it. I would also hope that it wouldn’t even obtain that 7 because the card does not deserve the grade after being worked. Hell isn’t that the whole point these plastic slabbing Sob’s are here in the hobby now? To weed this stuff out, not decide what level of working it is ok and what’s not?? That’s why your scenario makes no sense to me. |
#96
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Posted By: Jim Crandell
Peter, |
#97
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Posted By: John
Leon, |
#98
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
I do not mean to lend my approval to any of this by my hypothetical. Personally, as I have stated, soaking does not really bother me for the reasons many have stated, but crease removal does and I PERSONALLY would avoid scenario 4 totally. I am just stating my admittedly cynical views as to what I think would happen in the market, because I think there are enough people buying cards, UNLIKE Jim and yourself and others to be sure, who care more about the label than anything else and they would bid the card up to the same levels. Just my opinion and I hope I am wrong. |
#99
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
John as to your point about the scenario making no sense, I firmly believe many many cards that have had wrinkles taken out of them and worse are making their way into high number holders. It's debatable what percentage, but I don't think the grading companies have the time or the technology to detect very expert work. |
#100
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
I disagree also. Moreover, since it seems the prevailing view is that soaking etc. is both OK and widely done, then why is it rarely, i.e. never disclosed? Hell, if the price realized is going to be the same with or without disclosure, then why not tell it like it is? Methinks it's because it does affect the price and the number of bidders, and as Jim pointed out, a healthy percentage of people here would not buy it. |
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