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#1
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Posted By: Robert
Should not a card that is autographed by the player raise the value of the card? Or is it that card collectors are purists and feel that an autographed card downgrades the value because they want the purist card they can find in a complete unaltered condition. So then an autograph would be considered an alteration? I have seen some T206's with autos sell for some nice $$'s on EBAY. I was looking at the REA section with those amazing sets of 40's and 50's cards all with autos and blown away at the task someone went through to accomplish that feat. I only wish that PSA would give a grade to the card instead of the "Authentic" stamp they put on every card. |
#2
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Posted By: jackgoodman
I've found that card collectors collect cards and autograph collectors collect autographs - and rarely do the twain meet. That's not to say there aren't exceptions, like a complete card set autographed or a highly sought-after signature desired in any format. |
#3
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Whichever side the purists take, these cards will sell for more when autographed by the player and encapsulated by PSA/DNA. |
#4
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Posted By: qualitycards.com
To some purists a card with a signature devalues the card since the card now has writing on it. Prior to Mantle's death I saw many good deals on his late 50's Topps cards that were signed. The Mantle card collector or set collector didn't want a sig on it and the Mantle autograph collector would rather have a signed ball or a photo to display. So the signature added little value. |
#5
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Posted By: davidcycleback
For autograph collectors, certain issues are better for autographs than others. For example, the 1954 Bowmans are often not so hot as the signatures often don't show up so well on the dense fronts. On the other hand, some cheapo 1970s-80s commerative sets will show up regularly in the autograph section of a MastroNet or Mike Gutierrez Auction. This is because a Hank Greenberg or Carl Hubbell signature shows up great on the cheap black & white image, even if the card itself is worth 2 cents. |
#6
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Posted By: William Brumbach
I think that it varies and depends on a case by case basis. In the last two or three years I have started collecting autographed cards. I am over the half-way mark on a signed 1953 Topps set and also like to pick up '50, '53' and '55 Bowman as well as the occasional '52 Topps. |
#7
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Posted By: Jeff Drum
I have collected both cards and autographed cards for years. I have auto'd cards ranging from T206 to 2005 Topps. My experience has been that the actual value of the card has little to do with what will be paid for an auto'd card. Case in point, I bought an auto'd '48 Bowman Musial from a dealer a few years ago who had 5 different Musials to pick from including a Red Heart, Bowman, etc. All were priced within $25 of each other and priced according to the perceived quality of the auto (Sharpie, ink, clear, run off side, smudged, etc.). I believe that there is a difference in prices realized for cards that are vintage signed; an ink signed '51 Bowman as opposed to a Sharpie signed '51 Bowman gottent through the mail or at a show in the 80's-90's. The difference is not great but is there and is driven I believe by auto'd set builders. The auto'd cards price is driven primarily by the scarcity of the auto, whether the player is deceased, a HOF, etc. Some notable exceptions do exist such as '52 Topps high numbers. |
#8
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Posted By: Jeff Drum
One other thing, there is an appreciable difference between prices realized for "real" cards as opposed to Collector's issues. I would expect that an authentic signed "33 Goudey Frank Frisch would command a premium over say a 1960 Golden Press of The Fordham Flash. |
#9
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Posted By: davidcycleback
I collect modern photographs. For a limited original photograph by a famous photographer, it is highly desirable and will raise the value if photo is signed by the photographer (In part because it shows that the photo was personally approved by its photographer). The difference is that the signature is almost never found or wanted on the image area. The signature will most often be found on the back, though often below the image on the front border. For the collector and photographer, the image is the thing of importance. |
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