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#1
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#2
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Agree on Gypsy Queens.
-Al |
#3
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I think I'm the only person in the hobby that likes 1939 Play Ball...
__________________
Check out https://www.thecollectorconnection.com Always looking for consignments 717.327.8915 We sell your less expensive pre-war cards individually instead of in bulk lots to make YOU the most money possible! and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecollectorconnectionauctions |
#4
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1939 Play Ball has some great portrait images.
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#5
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I think D304s are underrated - a very cool set with back variations and many HOFers, but hands down some of the very worst artwork around
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Absolutely, and, in essence, it's the first Bowman set. People don't seem to acknowledge that those and the Swells are the same company.
__________________
Check out https://www.thecollectorconnection.com Always looking for consignments 717.327.8915 We sell your less expensive pre-war cards individually instead of in bulk lots to make YOU the most money possible! and Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecollectorconnectionauctions |
#7
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I am not a set collector, except for the following two, small, obscure, and scarce (I love scarce/rare cards!) sets that understandably generate little collector interest or love:
- 1910 E222 A.W.H. Caramels, a 12-card set I collect because all the cards are of Virginia League players (I'm a native and life-long Virginian). Perhaps the most interesting aspects of this set are that both the fronts and backs were issued in different colors for the SAME player, and there are several different back designs. I need these three: Lipe, Revelle, & Ryan plus an upgrade of my Ison card. - 1925 Holland Creameries, an 18-card set issued in Canada and comprised entirely of players who were on the Washington Senators 1924 WS Championship team (I collect cards of all the players on this team). I need the SP Peckinpaugh card plus upgrades of several others.
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Seeking very scarce/rare cards for my Sam Rice master collection, e.g., E210 York Caramel Type 2 (upgrade), 1931 W502, W504 (upgrade), W572 sepia, W573, 1922 Haffner's Bread, 1922 Keating Candy, 1922 Witmor Candy Type 2 (vertical back), 1926 Sports Co. of Am. with ad & blank backs. Also 1917 Merchants Bakery & Weil Baking cards of WaJo. Also E222 cards of Lipe, Revelle & Ryan. |
#8
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Brian |
#9
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Brian |
#10
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Was surprised that Bob Lemke and the SCD catalog never mentioned that in their descriptions. They treated it always as just one set. But besides the obvious size difference and the different colors between the low and high number series, what other set have you ever heard of that supposedly had a short printed high number series where the set itself was issued over a multi-year period? That doesn't make sense to me. One other big thing that would tend to support all 192 cards being in one set is that there are no players in the low number series that are duplicated in the high number series. Plus, they sequentially numbered the cards from 1 to 192 as if it were all one set. But sequential numbering itself doesn't necessarily guarantee cards are all supposed to be in one single set. For example, the 1938 Goudey "Big Head" cards are numbered 241 to 288. It seems, for whatever reason, that they were possibly intended to be an extension of the 1933 Goudey set then, that included cards 1 to 240? But if that was the intention, why did they jump from a 1933 issue to a 1938 issue to do so, skipping over all the other Goudey issues for the years in between? That is a question that has aways stumped me as to the true reason why Goudey numbered their 1938 cards as they did. |
#11
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What's more, if you look at the BACKS of the cards, the low number series declare the cards as being one of a series of 288 cards. And the high number series declare each card being one of a series of 312! This means that at first, Goudey planned a 48-card set, and then at some point decided to do 72 cards. Yet they only did 24, really, unless you subscribe to the belief that repeating the same 24 cards a second time (with cartoons added) was their plan all along, which I don't. There are WAY too many important players excluded from the set. For instance - why would they have not produced a card of Lou Gehrig or Chuck Klein, both of whom endorsed Goudey gum in 1934? There are lots of examples like that. I could go on about this set and all its unanswered questions all day. -Al |
#12
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And the fact that only the '33 Goudey set fits that 288 card set description is a real head scratcher. LOL That is one of the great things about collecting such old sets. Trying to figure out what was going on behind the scenes. Great sets though. |
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__________________
Successful transactions on Net54 with balltrash, greenmonster66; Peter_Spaeth; robw1959; Stetson_1883; boxcar18; Blackie |
#14
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1961 Fleer Basketball. It's my favorite set. It gets some love, but not enough, IMO. Here's a random scan from my set.
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