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#1
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Posted By: jay behrens
With collectors paying large premiums for uncatalogued cards many collectors are now reluctant to expose recent finds of unctalogued cards becuase the subsequent listing of these cards would devalue them. I'm in that position myself. I have 2 uncatalogued cards, but won't mention them here or even what set they are from becuase I want to protect their value. But the collector and historian in me wants to bring these cards into the open so that others know they exist. |
#2
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Posted By: Joe_G.
Some sets, such as Gypsy Queens, contain many uncatalogued cards but as mentioned little or no premiums are placed on them when added to the price guide. Value should really depend on how mature the checklist for the card in question is. Gypsy Queens are known to have a very incomplete listing. Uncatalogued N173 players (sometimes just certain poses of players) are still surfacing from time to time. |
#3
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Posted By: Scott
Won't they be worth more as catalogued, but one-of-a-kind? |
#4
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Posted By: dan mckee
I am with Jay on this one, I have several uncataloged cards and entire issues. I have had to pay a high premium to get most because they are uncataloged. I won't dare have them cataloged, it is like throwing money out of the window while going down the freeway. Actually, I am very careful not to mention them to Bob or Lyman. Leon I believe shares this point with me too. |
#5
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Posted By: Reid Bruce
With really rare sets (which is where you are going to find most of the valuable uncataloged cards), isn't it reasonable to assume that many of the "listed" cards are also one or two of a kind finds. As such, the value of your uncataloged card really is the same as the cataloged cards because both are equally rare. Also, don't forget that value is determined by a sellers willingness to pay, not the price listed in a guide. If you wish to sell a rare card for which there is a limited market, try to sell it for what you think it is worth, not what the guide says. Ultimately, it serves the hobby to have previously unlisted cards become listed because it contributes to the knowledge base of collectors. |
#6
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Posted By: Rich Klein
I know that I try here to not price cards which are recently discovered and no market information is gathered on yet. If only one or two copies are known, I believe in not putting in a price -- if more surface, then prices can be notated. |
#7
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Posted By: dan mckee
Rich, I must completely disagree with you. Many of the collectors on this board are advanced and have alot of what they are looking for. If an uncataloged card appears in an issue that they collect, it will sell just as well as if it were cataloged and probably better. |
#8
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Posted By: Anonymous
you sell off book price. i've found both ways work. uncataloged can sell for a premium...but you need to know your buyers. |
#9
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Posted By: Rich Klein
One of the other pts to mention is that, what happens to your cards if you are not here anymore to explain the whole story beyond them. |
#10
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Posted By: Ray
with the idea of "hiding" it. I know it depends on what type of collector you are. I collect for enjoyment, not investment. I like the look of a T206 beater more than a T206 that would grade a PSA8. I think by hiding it, you are hurting fellow collectors who are trying to learn more about the sets they collect. If I spent years collecting a set that I believed only had 220 cards in it and once I finshed, it was discovered years later that someone had another 5 cards that were one-of-a-kind and they purposely never shared that info with their colleagues, I'd be a little annoyed. I understand your point of view, its an investment, and I can see where you guys are coming from. I'm not saying its wrong... but from my end, I would see it as taking away from the joy of pre-war collecting. |
#11
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Posted By: Glen V
While I look for hard to find type cards, if a card isn't in the SCD, I'm not willing to pay a fortune for it. There can be questions of whether it is a recently printed collector issue, a newly stamped back on an old card, some poster/notebook cutout that really shouldn't be worth much, or just some fake. Once it gets put in the SCD, it gives the issue more legitamacy and I'm more inclined to add it to my want list. |
#12
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Posted By: dan mckee
Rich, I hope I am hanging around for awhile. I guess I am the only sucker who pays higher for uncataloged cards. I must agree it is better for the hobby to have them cataloged and I am primarily a collector and not an investor but I am not an idiot so if I pay $300 for a card, then have it cataloged and it becomes $100 like the other commons in the set, well then I would be an idiot. |
#13
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Posted By: Rich Klein
You would know that I do my best with recently found cards NOT to price them as there is no market history so they don't go into our price guide as priced. |
#14
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Posted By: Richard Masson
I think uncatalogued cards carry a premium, but only because they are unique. That characteristic applies regardless of whether its on the checklist or not. In fact, the highest value for these cards is to the folks who are putting sets together. I don't think there would be a difference in price between a unique, checklisted California League N172 and a unique, unchecklisted one. Cards like this don't trade on "book" value anyway. The same people want it. The supply is the same. In a bizarre way, letting people know it exists should increase demand for the card. |
#15
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Posted By: dan mckee
Rich, back when Burdick and those gents cataloged this stuff, nothing was worth anything so that is a terrible example. Money ruins alot of things, at least I think so, can anyone with money vouch for this? Does Beckett catalog anything prior to 1948? Dan. |
#16
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Posted By: leon
I pretty much completely agree with you however, (don't ya hate the howevers?)when I first got the Western Playgrounds Rich asked if he could see them and catalogue them. I said yes.......but otherwise I do agree with you. The other point was brought up that is valid too in that if they are catalogued then they could actually become more valuable because then they are "checklisted" and people will put them on their want lists. I think I have helped Mr. Lemke on a few occasions ( Holmes-to-Homes, E94 overprints etc..) but still have a few I am not making known.....so I guess I don't know what the hell I think |
#17
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Posted By: warshawlaw
It doesn't matter what the book says on rare cards; we all pay what the market demands to get our grubby little mitts on them. |
#18
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Posted By: dan mckee
That is cool Leon, I know what I think and I learned the hard way. I basically paid to have a few things cataloged. Dano |
#19
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Posted By: dan mckee
Really Adam?? That uncataloged strip common that Scott Gaynor posted here did darn well at over $1000 when most strips command a lot less. That uncataloged E-card of Wagner that David Bryan recently ebay'd did alot better than comparable Wagner E-cards of the era. Dan. |
#20
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Posted By: andy becker
dan: i would agree with adam's point that having a card |
#21
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Posted By: Reid Bruce
Dan, |
#22
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Posted By: dan mckee
I feel it will retain its value if it stays uncataloged. Just my opinion. I think those 2 cards would bring as much or more if sold again as long as they were not cataloged. Dan. |
#23
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Posted By: leon
Great debates on both sides.....Since I am honestly in between on this I will continue not knowing what to do......But I do have another question on this topic. I happen to have an uncatalogued E224 Texas Tommy from my CA find. I feel if I make it known it will be worth less as then it's catalogued...but from a fairly well albeit very scarce set. Thoughts? |
#24
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Posted By: Glen V
Leon, it comes down to timing. Don't think it matters if it's cataloged or not. If two or more people w/ lots of money are collecting the Texas Tommy set, it goes for lots of money. Otherwise it goes for a little more that what a type collector would pay for a cataloged one. |
#25
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Posted By: jay behrens
The reason people are willing to pay a premium for uncatalogued cards is that they like the idea of owning something that was not known to exist. Once it becomes catalogued, it becomes a known commodity and loses that appeal. |
#26
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Posted By: Glen V
Sandiegowill recently sold an uncat. orange border that went for a little more than $300. You see cataloged Alleghenys & Lections sell for more. I've seen other uncat. cards sell recently for under $100. Hard to tell what an uncat. card will bring. I certainly was surprised at the price Scott's hit - doubt many of us would have predicted they would sell that high. |
#27
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Posted By: Andy Baran
I agree with Richard. I always come clean when discovering uncataloged items. I have contacted Bob Lemke directly on all of them. Personally, I just don't think that it's right to keep these items a secret. This is a hobby, albeit a very expensive one. |
#28
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Posted By: Scott
I think there are two different situations here, and each will have different results: |
#29
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Posted By: warshawlaw
Sort of sums up the conundrum. If the card is uncatalogued and you don't tall anyone about it, and it never transacts except when you bought it, how can you be sure of what it is worth? |
#30
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Posted By: Scott
The Speaker example was intended to represent a PRICE INCREASE when it comes out of hiding. I could be wrong, but I suspect not. For a less popular set or player, the price might drop. It's all speculation of course. |
#31
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Posted By: dan mckee
Leon, this is a perfect test, you know what you paid for it. Catalog it, sell it to me for half of what you paid, and let's see who is right. Oops! guess this would make me wrong but what a score I would have! Yes this is a good vintage debate and I see I am getting my rump handed to me but all in good spirits. I admit that I am in the minority on this one, oh well, w/o 2 sides we wouldn't have a debate. Dan. |
#32
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Posted By: leon
I am with you on this issue more than I am the other way....so you ain't alone....later |
#33
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Posted By: Paul
I agree with Runscott's post. I would go one step further. I see only one situation in which the uncatalogued status of a card increases its value. The card is from a well known very scarce set (Gypsy Queen for example) and the seller can create the false impression that it is scarcer than all the rest of the cards in the set because it is uncatalogued. I really do think that this false impression is what drives the value up. |
#34
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Posted By: Ray
Isn't this a case of "buy the card, not the holder"? Let me explain... You're saying that the fact that the card isn't catalogued, makes it more valuable, but the second it's made public, it most likely will lose its value? So are you really buying/selling the card... or are you buying/selling the "secret" of the card? |
#35
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Posted By: Bill Cornell
I think Rich's point is a good one - it's a benefit to the collecting community to make the existence known of previously uncatalogued cards. If putting a price on this makes some people not want to share information, I think that's really unfortunate. |
#36
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Posted By: Richard Masson
I'd call this the "Topps syndrome" in SCD price guides. Vintage sets just do not follow the pattern of modern card sets where there are commons, high numbers and stars. There has to be more thought given to assigning values based on scarcity (a Jennings Tango Eggs, anyone?) and true demand. If a new card is catalogued, it should be footnoted as possibly unique and assigned a higher value. At least periodically someone needs to review not only the pricing but the relative pricing within a set for accuracy. |
#37
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Posted By: Ryan Christoff
One of the things that drives me crazy about Cuban and Puerto Rican cards is the whole cult of secrecy that seems to exist among some of the oldtimers in the hobby. I have personally alienated myself from several of these people by checklisting some of these previously unchecklisted sets and posting them on my website. |
#38
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Posted By: warshawlaw
I think just about everyone here and certainly every advanced collector out there treats the catalogue as a checklist, not as a price guide except in the broadest sense. As a checklist, it is very encouraging to a potential buyer to see the card listed. |
#39
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Posted By: dan mckee
Ray, I really do not think you can compare me to the paper cut outs or hiding the trimming. That is rediculous. And I am not concealing anything to make money, I conceal it so that I do not lose money. I pay a premium for uncataloged, I continue to keep it uncataloged so that I don't LOSE money. Thanks for comparing me to the slime that steals from people by deceiving them. Dan. |
#40
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Dan: |
#41
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Posted By: dan mckee
Hal, I was sitting on the Keeler but it has been flattened beyond recognition. It is now a cabinet card. |
#42
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Posted By: Ryan Christoff
So THAT'S how Mastro's Keeler got "cleaned"!!! |
#43
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Poor Wee Willie... |
#44
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Posted By: Ray
Dan, |
#45
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Posted By: leon
Unfortunately capitalism sucks......I am still in the middle on this issue ...regards |
#46
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Posted By: Ray
You know what... Dan, I apologize for that statement before. After looking over the thread, I see why you continue to have the card uncatalogued. I don't agree with it, but I can respect your decision. |
#47
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Posted By: Scott
I agree with Bill and others that it is best for the hobby that uncatalogued card issues be shared, but these cards belong to Dan and it's his right to do whatever he wants. Certainly there's nothing unethical about not telling us what cards he has. |
#48
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Posted By: Ray
sorry, i editted my last post... He does have a right to hide his cards from the public, that wasn't the part that was "unethical" to me. It was the point that someone would keep a card uncatalogued just to get a higher selling price that I have an issue with. |
#49
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Posted By: Robert A
I don't think the only reason collectors conceal cards in their collection from the public is to "maximize gains." It's one person's collection. Perhaps, the collector enjoys that others don't know that a particular example exists. |
#50
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Posted By: Scott Elkins
I remember waiting to sell a Ju-Ju Drums card I had when I was type collecting until after it was in the SCD - I simply put in the description that it wasn't listed the year before, but is now catalogued and is possibly one of a kind - actually, I believe that helped the value. I found out when type collecting that a few potential bidders will start to question a card's authenticity if it is not listed in SCD (which could actually hurt the auction of a card). |
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