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#1
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Posted By: Phil Garry
How does everyone feel about the way postcards are currently graded by the major grading companies with respect to being postally used as they were intended to be when they were printed? |
#2
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
I do not think postcards should be downgraded for postal use except in the case where the ink from the cancellation bleeds through to the front of the card. I personally prefer the postcards that I collect to be used because it's easier to date them and often times there's an interesting story to the note on the back. |
#3
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Posted By: Matt
I doubt the grading companies will change their standards, but the market may evolve like OJs, where the market value is disconnected from the technical grade. |
#4
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Posted By: Greg Theberge
Phil, |
#5
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Posted By: Dan Bretta
Matt, I think for the most part it already is....most postcard collectors (that I know anyway) are not trying to put registry sets together and many postcard issues are so rare that collectors will take whatever they can get. |
#6
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Posted By: Bruce Dorskind
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#7
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Posted By: Joe D.
Bruce... I hate to disagree about the writing detracting from the postcard. |
#8
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Posted By: Mark
I would pay more for the ungraded and/or postally-used postcard. I realize I'm in the vast minority here, but the postally used card is far more interesting and visually appealing to me. I completely agree with Greg's comment above, and if I came across one I liked (which happened to be graded), the first thing I would do would be to crack it out of its slab. I have yet to find a Bar Code that goes well with the item being housed inside... would much prefer a tasteful framing job and/or creative display, any day of the week. |
#9
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Posted By: Steve M.
An assigned numerical grade is irrelevant to me. Any numerical grade which evidences that the card has not been altered is fine with me. I do recognize that for some the value difference between an SGC 60 Novelty Cutlery Cobb versus an SGC 10 graded one is an important consideration. If the only difference between the two is that the SGC 10 was postally used and the SGC 60 not, then I guess if one wants to pay 5X for the SGC 60, well it's your money. |
#10
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Posted By: davidcycleback
As per intent of issue, I like a nice handwritten note on a postcard, but wouldn't want to to be all over the place or messy or the ink bleeding to the front. How is writing graded, anyway? For neatness and penmanship and tone of ink? |
#11
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Posted By: Mark
Very well said, David.... great summation of the differences between Cards and PCs! |
#12
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Posted By: Greg Theberge
The only thing I would add, though, is that neither the PC or the Topps were "meant" to be graded. I suppose if Topps had the incentive, they could always sell their cards already graded for a higher price. |
#13
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Posted By: davidcycleback
People, including I, tend to like items that are in nicer condition-- Who prefers a Pete Rose rookie with a grease stain or a figurine chipped? I believe some collectors sincerely like things in pristine condition. However, professional grading and the graded card hobby often is a simply a device to make the common appear rare. I mean, what's the point to get a 1981 Fleer common graded a 10 other than as an attempt to make it appear 'rarer' than 50,000 examples of the card. A T206 Ty Cobb Tobacco is rare. To make a 1981 Fleer valued as rare, you need an alchemist, a hypnotist and Hollywood agent -- and that's were professional grading comes in. |
#14
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Posted By: Greg Theberge
David, great post. |
#15
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Posted By: Michael Steele
Greg, |
#16
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Posted By: Rhett Yeakley
The easiest way for the Grading Companies to do this would be to grade the cards with either "Unused" or "Postally Used" on the slip and then graded on their merits (for a postally used card the card could be graded as if the writing were not present). |
#17
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Posted By: Bruce Dorskind
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#18
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Posted By: Wesley
"While several came back with high grades, a few (with writing) received grades of Authentic." |
#19
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Posted By: Rawn Hill
I view the correspondence on the PC to be an added value to the card and the postmark helps to date it as authentic. |
#20
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Posted By: martindl
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