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Old 02-18-2013, 10:32 AM
steve B steve B is offline
Steve Birmingham
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Join Date: Sep 2009
Location: eastern Mass.
Posts: 8,397
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I don't collect T206s exclusively, but I do have more of them than any other prewar set. And they're not even my favorite prewar set.

So why do I collect them?

I think a lot of it is part of an early hobby experience.

1977 I moved to Arlington Mass from a place that was a bit small and backwards. 74 had been my first year of really buying cards and the Hank Aaron specials showing 4 of his earlier cards on each one fascinated me. I'd only found one older card, a 1968 that a kid traded to me from his brothers collection.
New town, Arlington, about 10x the population of the old place, which was a suburb of a place about as big as Arlington. After cross country practice I asked someone if they knew any places that had stamps/coins or old baseball cards. There was actually a place right in town! And nearly on my way home!

Going into Halls Nostalgia that first time was amazing. Old Topps cards in quantity. Boxes full of them. Some bigger than usual, who knew the HA specials had made them all look the same size. AND some funny small cards that were drawings. Bowmans they called them.
And there in the display case and some displayed on the wall next to it were the most amazing yet! Small and skinny, most displayed in a plastic pocket on a 3x5 with some stats typed on it.
Much prettier than the Bowmans, many of the players were shown against sunsets or in formal portraits that even painted had an air of importance.
I think I was hooked right then. I had to have one. But $1.50! for someone I'd never heard of.......I think my allowance was $2-3 a week. So they were expensive.
A while later they said they'd found a cheap one for me.(I'd been hanging out there after school maybe 2-3 days a week no doubt making them crazy with questions) Beckley, with a polar bear back. And a lot of tape holding the tear together that otherwise would have meant it was two half cards. But it was only twenty cents. About a year later I got my first job practically next door. And I could actually afford some commons. I tried to get one of each brand back, missing by the usual suspects, but getting close.

Part of what keeps me interested is the stuff some people don't like. The big puzzle of just how they were made. That aspect can be tedious and dull and if you can't stand it, that's fine. I like the sunset cards, others like the portraits. Also fine.

For many sets that puzzle aspect is missing or so far beyond my means that I just can't get into it. I like 33 Goudeys, but there are complets uncut sheets, so not many mysteries.
I also like the stuff like caramel cards, and the tougher T sets. But a red cross or pirate is probably well over my budget. I'm sure there are mysteries about those sets, but I'll probably never own one or if I'm lucky maybe one of each. Hard to study when you don't own any and they're available seldom enough that even finding scans is a challenge.

Steve B
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  #2  
Old 02-18-2013, 10:56 AM
wolf441's Avatar
wolf441 wolf441 is offline
Steve Woe.lfel
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Join Date: Jul 2012
Location: Walpole, MA
Posts: 2,170
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Quote:
Originally Posted by steve B View Post
I don't collect T206s exclusively, but I do have more of them than any other prewar set. And they're not even my favorite prewar set.

So why do I collect them?

I think a lot of it is part of an early hobby experience.

1977 I moved to Arlington Mass from a place that was a bit small and backwards. 74 had been my first year of really buying cards and the Hank Aaron specials showing 4 of his earlier cards on each one fascinated me. I'd only found one older card, a 1968 that a kid traded to me from his brothers collection.
New town, Arlington, about 10x the population of the old place, which was a suburb of a place about as big as Arlington. After cross country practice I asked someone if they knew any places that had stamps/coins or old baseball cards. There was actually a place right in town! And nearly on my way home!

Going into Halls Nostalgia that first time was amazing. Old Topps cards in quantity. Boxes full of them. Some bigger than usual, who knew the HA specials had made them all look the same size. AND some funny small cards that were drawings. Bowmans they called them.
And there in the display case and some displayed on the wall next to it were the most amazing yet! Small and skinny, most displayed in a plastic pocket on a 3x5 with some stats typed on it.
Much prettier than the Bowmans, many of the players were shown against sunsets or in formal portraits that even painted had an air of importance.
I think I was hooked right then. I had to have one. But $1.50! for someone I'd never heard of.......I think my allowance was $2-3 a week. So they were expensive.
A while later they said they'd found a cheap one for me.(I'd been hanging out there after school maybe 2-3 days a week no doubt making them crazy with questions) Beckley, with a polar bear back. And a lot of tape holding the tear together that otherwise would have meant it was two half cards. But it was only twenty cents. About a year later I got my first job practically next door. And I could actually afford some commons. I tried to get one of each brand back, missing by the usual suspects, but getting close.

Part of what keeps me interested is the stuff some people don't like. The big puzzle of just how they were made. That aspect can be tedious and dull and if you can't stand it, that's fine. I like the sunset cards, others like the portraits. Also fine.

For many sets that puzzle aspect is missing or so far beyond my means that I just can't get into it. I like 33 Goudeys, but there are complets uncut sheets, so not many mysteries.
I also like the stuff like caramel cards, and the tougher T sets. But a red cross or pirate is probably well over my budget. I'm sure there are mysteries about those sets, but I'll probably never own one or if I'm lucky maybe one of each. Hard to study when you don't own any and they're available seldom enough that even finding scans is a challenge.

Steve B

Great story Steve!

I think that Halls Nostalgia also had a store in Buzzard's Bay, MA, right next to a little movie theater. This would have been around 1982-1984. My family had a vacation house in Plymouth and I picked up one of my first T206's at that shop (although my 1st T206 purchase was in a card shop in Hyde Park, MA - I can't remember the name of the place - it was an Abbaticchio Brown sleeves for $4.00.

I collect the T206 set for many of the same reasons that others have cited: set size makes for a good challenge. Great selection of HOF'ers, including some of the greatest players of all time. The artwork, the lure of the Wagner, the mysteries on how they were distributed, how the sheets were laid out. The fact that you can always find one available for sale if you need a fix . There are plenty of other pre-war sets that I absolutely love and one of the best features of the board is the monthly pickups thread. I love to see what everyone is buying. There just some cards/sets that are never available for purchase, or else way out of my price range.
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T206 Master Set:103/524
T206 HOFers: 22/76
T206 SLers: 11/48
T206 Back Run: 28/39

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