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#1
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Posted By: peter chao
Guys, |
#2
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Posted By: Paul
Much less than 1/2, but it's hard to say exactly what the effect would be from set to set and player to player. I think most collectors would prefer a VG card to a trimmed card that looks NR MT, and I think VG cards sell for way under 1/2 of Nr Mt cards. |
#3
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Posted By: Brad Green
Here's a recent example of a Lefty Grove Diamond Star card on eBay that the seller said was trimmed. The card sold for $89. An untrimmed Nr-Mt Grove Diamond Star card would cost thousands of dollars (if it were professionally graded)... An ungraded Nr-Mt Grove Diamond Star that was not trimmed might run you $700... |
#4
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Posted By: Judge Dred (Fred)
This is the big delimma. A lot of collectors (so called purist) treat trimmed cards as if they are Scarlet lettered women of the past. Personally, I see nothing wrong witha scarlet lettered woman. |
#5
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Posted By: davidcycleback
Many collectors don't want a card that is trimmed-- not even interested in owning it. This automatically cuts the demand for and value of a trimmed card. Most of the rest will probably value a trimmed 'Near Mint' in the Poor to GdVg range, possibly up to Vg. A trimmed card grades Poor (some would say lower)-- though some collectors will consider it an especially good looking Poor card. For very rare and desirable early cards, ala a Peck & Snyder or SF Hess, they can be priced higher. |
#6
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Posted By: Bobby Binder
A trimmed Lajoie R319 sold in the last REA for 22K which is higher then a PSA 4 and almost as much as a SGC 60. It did look good though. |
#7
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Posted By: peter chao
David, Bobby |
#8
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Posted By: quan
i didn't interpret bobby's post that way. i'm sure that card will find its way into a holder somewhere if someone was willing to drop 22 large on it. |
#9
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Posted By: leon
To determine trimming, and it's effect on value, you need to look at each card on it's own merits. The price could be from 10% to 75% of a non-trimmed card, imo. There is no way to be exact, generally speaking (boy that sounded weird). I sold a trimmed D304 Young for about $1000....while the same card that wasn't trimmed would have been about 3k-4k...(it was low end anyway).....I have sold trimmed Mayo's that brought about 30% also, of what an untrimmed one would bring....ballpark it at 20% to 40% of the value and you will be close....imo from experience... |
#10
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Posted By: B.C.Daniels
reduces value of an 87 Donruss by 5%. So a 50 cent card is now worth 45 though no one will buy it even for 15 cents. |
#11
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Posted By: Ed
Just my perception, but it would appear that good faith dealing allows trimmed cards to retain far more value than those sold surreptitiously or fraudulently. |
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