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#2
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![]() Quote:
http://www.oldcardboard.com/r/r315/r...?cardsetID=873 |
#3
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![]() Quote:
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#4
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So Leon's horizontal strip shows that the Type B and Type D cards (Old Cardboard's Names) were printed on the same strip. That's interesting.
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#5
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Very good! Are players known to exist with both Type B and Type D?
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#6
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Yes, there have always been four different type captions known on these. I too thought it interesting that the horizontal strip has different captions on it. I have never seen another horizontal strip of these though I have seen about 5-10 vertical ones.....and they have always been strips of 3. The other thing is, we know Burdick made some mistakes but why the heck are these classified as a recent gum issue, "R"? BTW, who says you can't collect on a budget? The strip of 5 was $99, and in the correct category!!
__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#7
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Are they really "strip cards" or were they actually sheet cards? Maybe originally they were from a sheet of 15 cards 5 across and 3 down and the strips you see just happen to depend on whether they were originally cut vertically or horizontally from the originating sheet.
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#8
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I agree with the sheet comment...
Obviously, that is a horizontal strip and a vertical strip. That doesn't mean that B and D cards were printed in horizontal... although it would mean that B and D weren't printed in vertical strips only. Golly, sometimes when thinking about this stuff I feel like I'm in an old college logic class I once took. B and D's could be sheets, just as well as horizontal strips. What makes sense that all of the printing would have been the same way, instead of some vertical strips and some horizontal. I can envision that the cutting of the sheets might have varied... oops, I said it. Sheets. I think that is what was going on with these cards. Printed in sheets, distributed in strips, V's and H's. |
#9
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Only 6 players are found with the hand letter style (4th card over on the horizontal strip), all are White Sox players.
R315's can be found with the player's name inside a small box at bottom corner (40 different), another type has the player's name in a hand lettered style near the bottom border (6 different, all WhiteSox players), and both of these types can be found with the position and team name typed in the bottom border. There are also caption variations known, and the cards are found in B&W or a scarcer Yellow stock. I like the much tougher Yellow Cards, anyone have a strip of the yellow cards? Last edited by fkw; 10-09-2009 at 08:14 PM. |
#10
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Actually, one of the 6 series C/D players is Harvey Hendricks (sic) of Brooklyn, and the other 5 are White Sox.
Last edited by nolemmings; 10-09-2009 at 11:30 PM. |
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