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  #1  
Old 02-09-2013, 12:02 PM
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Runscott Runscott is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by drc View Post
When you get to early baseball cards, there's a lot of gray area, unanswerable questions, philosophy and personal sentiment. It's baseball card theory.

Many early CDVs of famous people were indeed marketed and sold to the public by the photographer, and famous people often handed out CDVs of themselves to general public fans. I've seen photographer advertising and order letters between famous people and studios that document this. Charles Dickens, as one example, ordered CDVs that he would send to fans who wrote to him. Those CDVs were definitely intended to be collected or otherwise kept as souvenirs or mementos. It also says you could own a Dickens CDV that was owned by Dickens.
So, if a player ordered a bunch of photographs from George Burke, and mailed those out when requested from fans, they would be ... baseball cards? The only difference from the item you describe is the thickness of the paper. And a photograph is often thicker than a baseball card;e.g-Type 1 coupons are thinner than the postcard-stock photos that Burke produced for players in the '30s and '40s. Not all were postcard stock, but that was an option (I have some).

I'm just messing with you - for the most part I'm in agreement with Barry's list, but then again, I don't own any expensive baseball cdv's or postcards, so I have no financial incentive to define those as baseball cards.
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Old 02-09-2013, 12:09 PM
drc drc is offline
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Card, as in the physical item itself, is defined differently by different people. Some people don't call something a baseball card simply because they don't think the fits the physical definition of a card. Sweet Caporal pins fit all the rules for being a baseball card except for one small detail-- it's a pin not a card.

For the benefit of those who don't know photography or French, the word carte in carte de visite (aka CDV) literally translates to card. And that's the original 1800s term, not a modern retroactive concoction.

And to reiterate what I said in an earlier post, card and trading card are not one and the same. A trading card has to be a card, but being a physical card does not in and of itself make something a trading card. And baseball card is short for baseball trading card.

Last edited by drc; 02-09-2013 at 12:28 PM.
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Old 02-09-2013, 12:29 PM
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Then there is Rucker's 1988 book, "Baseball Cartes - The First baseball Cards."

Last edited by bmarlowe1; 02-09-2013 at 12:29 PM.
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Old 02-09-2013, 12:33 PM
drc drc is offline
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Lionel Hutz: "This is the most blatant case of false advertising since my suit against the movie The Neverending Story."

Last edited by drc; 02-09-2013 at 12:45 PM.
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Old 02-09-2013, 12:36 PM
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Perhaps we should consult King Azaz's cabinet.
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Old 02-09-2013, 12:58 PM
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What only complicates things even further is back then they referred to Oscar Wilde as a card.
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