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Go Back   Net54baseball.com Forums > Net54baseball Main Forum - WWII & Older Baseball Cards > Net54baseball Vintage (WWII & Older) Baseball Cards & New Member Introductions

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  #1  
Old 10-23-2010, 10:10 PM
Matt Matt is offline
Matt Wieder
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As I recall, there was a theory discussed here some years ago that some of the e90-1s were actually produced with rounded corners. Aside from that making production difficult, from the notebook, that doesn't seem to be the case.
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Old 10-23-2010, 10:22 PM
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That's a nice story. I'm surprised that REA wouldn't try to remove the Jackson and get it graded.
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Old 10-24-2010, 12:41 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by slidekellyslide View Post
That's a nice story. I'm surprised that REA wouldn't try to remove the Jackson and get it graded.
very honorable of rob. wonder if he's costing the consignor some money? i'm 100% certain the winner of the lot will be soaking them out.

edit: old debate i'm against soaking and erasing
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Old 10-24-2010, 04:41 AM
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What a unique "1-of-a-kind" item. Why not leave it intact for a new owner to enjoy that way. It should not always be about the money.
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Old 10-24-2010, 06:03 AM
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Chris
I live just north of Tampa, Florida. But I was raised in Miami. One of the other posters on this thread lives somewhat north of me in Florida also.

Probably alot of members on this Forum go out hunting Garage Sales, etc. My job/family(wanting to spend with them) has kept me from this. One of my good friends can recite that dream I have(I have said it to him many times), of finding a scrapbook full of attached cards(pre 1920).

As Phil stated, I would probably keep it together and look at it every once inawhile. Would think of some one long ago placing the cards in the book, not realizing what he had in his hands(years later, would be so valuable).

Frank
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Old 10-24-2010, 06:59 AM
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So many cards now are in graded holders or safe deposit boxes or generally in the sort of artificial environment of modern collecting. They are scattered about and often handled as individuals, even as an individual card may make its way in and out of various set collections.

Seeing a scrapbook with attached cards is one of the few opportunities left to see cards as they historically were. Scrapbooks are a reflection of a time in someone's life a hundred years ago - the cards are captured in a historical environment, so to speak. It's the cards as they actually were back then, before they were parted out, soaked off, slabbed, bid on, mailed to many individual destinations and cycled repeatedly through the stream of commerce as individual cards.

Not sure what I'm saying here. I guess seeing cards in a scrapbook as opposed to individual collections, PSA holders, and auction sites is like seeing an animal in the wild as opposed to in a zoo.

Or maybe I just need some coffee this morning. I think it'd be nice to keep them in a scrapbook for awhile, but it doesn't make much sense so ... that won't happen.

J
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Old 10-24-2010, 08:37 AM
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Any time you are fortunate enough to stumble onto an untouched vintage collection you get to see a time capsule of how cards were collected 100 years ago. What did they save, how they organized them, what did they consider important, which products did they use, etc.
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Old 10-24-2010, 01:18 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jmk59 View Post
Seeing a scrapbook with attached cards is one of the few opportunities left to see cards as they historically were. Scrapbooks are a reflection of a time in someone's life a hundred years ago - the cards are captured in a historical environment, so to speak. It's the cards as they actually were back then, before they were parted out, soaked off, slabbed, bid on, mailed to many individual destinations and cycled repeatedly through the stream of commerce as individual cards . . . I guess seeing cards in a scrapbook as opposed to individual collections, PSA holders, and auction sites is like seeing an animal in the wild as opposed to in a zoo.
You nailed it, Joann.
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