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#1
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LOL, since you traded for the Frederick's Foto Ruth, how often will you post about it?
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#2
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Thanks. |
#3
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FF cards are rare...you just don't see many at all.
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#4
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Here are a few different type fronts from my last collection...
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#5
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Leon:
Those are beautiful...wondering if anyone has ever attempted to pull together the set. |
#6
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In addition to the smaller standard cards, there are larger format Frederick Foto cards such as the two I own below.
Not sure if they are actually proofs or perhaps they were cut from an advertising poster. Patrick |
#7
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Br.ia.n Ho.rn.e |
#8
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And it looks like JLange (hey Jlange) might need to add 3 more cards to his Mails want list?
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 08-30-2018 at 09:37 AM. |
#9
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Just for discussion sake, what makes these "cards". The issuer was the photographer which essentially just makes them photographs. They were not issued in conjunction with products (like 19th century card/photos) from anything I have seen and other sets of photographs do not get the same respect and classification. If they were 5x7 or 8X10 they would certainly just be a set of photos yet other series of photographs like those from the American League Service Bureau (which are actually numbered like cards) would fall into this same category. I know they are small and look like traditional baseball cards, but they clearly were developed on a full sheet with essentially no borders and trimmed down by the photographer.
At their base root, these are tiny "type 3" photographs developed in composite form and trimmed then given away by a photo studio in Sacramento. I have no skin in the game and am not trying to be controversial at all, just curious why these are "cards" and other sets of superior photographs (off their original negatives) from studios are not? I would be interested in others thoughts and I am in NO WAY downplaying anyone's cards or collections. Rhys
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Be sure to check out my site www.RMYAuctions.com |
#10
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#11
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Brian |
#12
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And for a long time collector it is always a pleasure to see images of cards I have never seen before...thanks everyone!
Brian |
#13
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This isn’t unprecedented in the card world, for example we don’t 100% know who issued the 1913 Oakland Oaks team issue cards but the limited circumstantial evidence seems to indicate them being a Cardinet Candy Co issue, they likely faced pushback from the Zeenut makers (Collins Candy Co) as they had exclusive rights to PCL players images and the following season instead of making cards of hometown Oakland Oaks they made their more famous Texas Tommy issue featuring Major Leaguers from much further away from home.
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Check out my YouTube Videos highlighting VINTAGE CARDS https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbE..._as=subscriber ebay store: kryvintage-->https://www.ebay.com/sch/kryvintage/...p2047675.l2562 Last edited by rhettyeakley; 08-30-2018 at 04:22 PM. |
#14
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i hope this doesn't ruin thanksgiving
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#15
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All good. We already fight at Thanksgiving over football game anyways
![]() I guarantee these were printed 8 to a full 8x10 double weight sheet of photo paper. The rough sizes of the cards, their composition as well as knowing how photos of the era were produced absolutely points to this. The photographer cut them up into equal sections as good as he could and that is how they were made and why they look the way they do. The thin side borders were because he laid them out to squeeze 4 images side by side to run length-wise across an 8x10 piece of photo paper and cut them after adding the name etc. The fact that only a few have the logo in the corner also helps this theory as those were almost certainly the corner images on the sheet before being cut up wheer photographers would put their marks. If they were issued with some type of product that would make sense to call them baseball cards, but all evidence including the back stamps indicate the photographer himself was a self promoter plugging his studio. I dont care either way, I dont collect these, but absent evidence these were put into a product of some type, these are just as much "cards" as several other photo issues with finite checklists. My hunch is that IF the Frederick Photos were bigger and less baseball card looking, they would not be considered baseball cards, but to each his own. What is and is not a baseball card will never have a definite answer, I am just speaking plainly as a photo guy here, and regardless of how these were issued, these are chopped up 8x10's used to promote a photo studio.
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Be sure to check out my site www.RMYAuctions.com |
#16
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Just about every "card" is chopped from a larger sheet.
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The reason I consider them to be cards is highlighted.
Having handled a good amount of them they just have the feel and look of baseball cards. They are printed on thicker stock than a photo (from what I remember), have their names and or teams and there are multiple cards known of most players. Their cuts aren't much worse then E220!! Quote:
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#18
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Lol, we are all good, we fight less than most sets of brothers do, but we certainly have our moments!
![]() The only ones that have the stamp on back are the larger “proofs”, none of the small “cards” have been found with the studio stamp on back.
__________________
Check out my YouTube Videos highlighting VINTAGE CARDS https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCbE..._as=subscriber ebay store: kryvintage-->https://www.ebay.com/sch/kryvintage/...p2047675.l2562 Last edited by rhettyeakley; 08-30-2018 at 04:18 PM. |
#19
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Jason |
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