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#1
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Detroit fans and set builders will care about Al Kaline, and HOF collectors. Post war has taken a pretty big hit in price over the last few years and could continue to slide but will always have spikes. When Nolan Ryan and other greats pass away they will have an immediate spike in price and then slowly come back down. Look at what happened when Ted Williams died, his cards shot way up and now they have dropped way way down in price, but over the past year his rookie is increasing in value. There will always be a buyer for whatever cards you may have, just maybe not for the price you were hoping for. I don't see prewar dropping in price anytime soon, if anything will keep rising as more and more collectors 25 and older get into it and have the income to support it. In a day and age of hundreds of channels to surf, the internet, and laptop cellphones, holding a piece of America's Pastime history is very peacful and entertaining in these fast times we live in.
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#2
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"...holding a piece of America's Pastime history is very peaceful and entertaining in these fast times we live in."
Couldn't say it better. |
#3
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Me.
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__________________
Galleries and Articles about T206 Player Autographs www.SignedT206.com www.instagram.com/signedT206/ @SignedT206 |
#4
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Hi Bob- nice to see you on the board, and hope you are well.
You said what I have been saying for a long time. The hobby is changing, the world is changing, and there will surely be a different landscape twenty years from now. My guess is there will always be collectors of vintage antiquities of all kinds, but there may in fact be less baseball card collectors than we have today. We baby boomers collected cards as a kid, and it was a rite of passage. That no longer exists today. A great many 8-12 year olds never even bought a single pack of cards in their lives, so when they become adults they will have a different perspective on collecting them. Yes, it will change, not necessarily for better or worse, but different for sure. The issue I have is that everything in the world changes too quickly. Look at technology, everything becomes obsolete in a year or two. I can't keep up with that, and really have no interest in doing so. So my point is we should expect things to change. |
#5
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To quote T206 Collector:
Me ![]() I'm 43 and plan on being around at least another 20 years. I figure collecting will continue to dip given the current economy and then there will be a resurgence with more collectors. I just plan on riding the wave. |
#6
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Hey Bob,
Interesting topic. I think there will always be vintage collectors. I was thinking the same thing as you and Barry S. a while back while ruminating about some of my vintage cards. My 9 year old daughter started watching me and looking at the various vintage cards laid on the table in front of me and she actually discovered that you could connect the miscut cards and assemble them like a jig saw puzzle to determine the order of the printing sheet. I had never thought of this until she pointed it out. She started asking questions about the various players and we a number of fun evening discussing old players from the deadball era. The key was not pushing her - but let her take the questions where her interests lay. Zach |
#7
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Good vintage will always have devotees but where the line is drawn between classic and crap in the future is unpredictable. I think enough people collect cards older than they are now and will continue to do so in the future that good stuff will always be chased. I don't think you need to have been a card collector as a kid to collect now but you probably needed to be a baseball fan. And baseball is booming, football even more so and even with the economy in shambles.
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#8
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a very sobering thought. Kids today do not need a photographic image on cardboard to remember their heroes like the good old days. With one click they can look up an image, and even print out a picture themselves if they need to. Come to think of it, many of them don't idolize these players. With all the scandals (Woods, McGwire) for the whole world to see this cannot be good for the sports collectibles industry. In short, technology has killed cardboard collecting for most youngsters.
Last edited by mintacular; 01-13-2010 at 05:11 PM. |
#9
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I'm counting on advances in medical science keeping current adult collectors alive for more than 20 years.
Buy only generic meds so you can afford my cards. |
#10
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First of all, welcome to the board, Bob.
I like the answer of "who is going to buy our cards in 20 yrs?" as being "me", the best. That being said I believe like the rest of the folks have said, it will be the people that migrate backwards from today's cards as well as those people that like the game, are collectors by habit, and start to have more disposable income as they mature. It's certainly true that kids today have a ton more options for stimuli ![]()
__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#11
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in values. |
#12
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People like myself will be buying your cards. I'm a 27-year-old professional who has been collecting for almost 20 years. My dad bought me my first pack when I was 8 (ah, the 1991 Topps Frank Thomas) and it quickly became a hobby that brought us closer together. He collected as a youth in the 50s and 60s (one of those unfortunates whose mothers tossed their collections) and enjoyed re-living a part of his youth with me. As I've gotten older and could afford it, I've moved into collecting higher-end items (Cobb, Ruth, an e95 set I'm slowly trying to build, etc.). As my earnings, presumably, continue to increase, the scope and depth of collection will increase and, hopefully, I will be able to enjoy the same type of bond with my son (should I have one) that my father and I had. I'm sure there are people out there with situations similar to mine who will end up the same way and probably own your cards someday.
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#13
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According to the U.S. census there are currently 310 million Americans. It it expected to reach 439 million by 2050. From a pure numbers standpoint, I just don't see how their could possibly be fewer card collectors in 20+ years. It's a simplistic view, but to me it sums-up the reality of the situation.
Lovely Day... |
#14
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Like Jason, I am a younger vintage collector (28 yrs old) and I plan on doing so for as long as I can. I wish I knew more collectors around my age near where I live...
__________________
My collection: http://imageevent.com/vanslykefan |
#15
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Welcome aboard, Bob.
In 20 years, some of us will be happy to be buying cards, at our advanced ages! best, barry |
#16
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Wow, parking is going to suck.
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#17
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Easy one. I'm taking the cards with me, and I'm going into an unmarked grave. Too many years reading this forum to take foolish chances...
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#18
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You can count me as one of those exceptions. As a kid I never got beyond cutting the cards off the back of my mom's Raisin Bran boxes. It wasn't until I was in my 20s that I really got going on collecting. I think I've told this story here before, but what flipped the switch for me was working in a coin shop where Wayne Miller had a card concession. I will say that I have been a fan of the game itself for as long as I can remember. The connection was always there, I had just never gone the card route before then. There are still plenty of fans of the game, even students of the game, who will want the deeper connection they can get from this old cardboard. Bill |
#19
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I believe we also had a thread earlier in which we were gathering store names; street addresses; etc.
Please feel free to post your Store Name and address in that thread (or in here) to join the Net 54 list of stores Regards Rich Klein |
#20
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Barry-nice to hear from you also. I have thought about this question for a few years now. My store is still relatively solid but I slowly see the handwriting on the wall. My customer base is now 80% adults and 20% kids. 5-10 years ago the percentages were the exact opposite. I have always dealt heavily in vintage because that is what I love but have always had a nice selection of the current era. As you stated, everything is changing and I can witness it first hand in the store. Their will always be collectors of coins, cards etc.. and I am not really referring quite as much to the 25-35 age group (they grew up with a more positive collecting atmosphere) as I am sure they will pick up some of the slack. I am in my 40's(the later half) and will always collect as long as I am capable of doing so. I am really referring to the 10-20 year old age group, who are growing up with virtually no interest in cards plus a tainted era of baseball. I do not have a crystal ball and maybe they will gravitate towards collecting vintage cards in their adult years, trends do change, but my gut does not see that happening. With the slow demise of card stores and shows, collecting will become more impersonal through the computer and auction houses, which I personally perceive as another negative. Back in 1976 I purchased my 1933 Goudey Babe Ruth with my dad at my side for $35 at the hotel Roosevelt in NYC. We could not believe we had spent that much on a card and it is memory with my dad I will always cherish. A few weeks back a young boy around age 13 purchased a Ted Williams card (over a t205 Joe Tinker) with his dad at my store and I told them my story. It was a really nice moment that still does happen but it is a true rarity. Again, the best of the best and the true legends will always be collected, I just think it will be tougher for today's kids to overcome their childhood collecting apathy and gulp down all the vintage we have cherished.
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#21
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Bob- as you know I met your dad a number of years ago and he and I spent the day talking about his love of the New York Giants. He was a collector too and if I recall correctly he was a big Carl Hubbell fan.
One of your most striking points is the lack of kids who are now coming into your store. That of course would not bode well for the future. |
#22
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Kids today are rarely interested in anything not video game related. Not good for the future of traditional collectables.
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#23
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Not good for the future in general.
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#24
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I don't think "the tainted era of baseball" will have anything to do with cards. 75 million people went to MLB games in 2009, and how many more went to the cheaper minor league stadiums. I would wager that only a small portion of the baseball following public cares about steroids/PEDs.
I am 33 years old. I am at age where all my friends are having or have had kids. Guess what? All the boys play baseball, all the boys collect cards of today's players. All their dads are teaching them the history of the game. If they stay interested in cards, they'll find the vintage stuff. Concerning what the future holds.... 1. Commons are called commons for a reason. Nice to have but when my friends are over and I pull out my Ruth, Gehrig, Cobb, etc., eyes open wide. Not just my friends, but my father's friends have asked me to bring over vintage stuff. 2. The internet has been a godsend. A. Cheap and easy way to trade and buy. B. Without the internet, we wouldn't be having this discussion C. Opened markets where there wasn't a market before 3. The future A. Big names will always sell B. Rare items will always sell C. High grade will sell D. The internet is the future, no more store fronts E. Shows will continue to happen just not as often F. Card will be viewed as a commodity for today's "older statesmen." Today it's a collection & hobby, tomorrow the commodity will be sold off for retirement, to pay for medical bills, etc. G. Something will come along to replace Ebay as the main sales venture. To add: I am not concerned about going to a store. I would rather sit at home, and compare prices and have something delivered. Search Ebay and use VCP to find what I want and if I don't like the price, wait. This isn't a generational thing any more. This year at Christmas I had 3 people come up to me at family parties saying they did all their shopping online like I do (We talked about it the year before) and they will never go to a store again. PS. I also play video games. Last edited by mcap100176; 01-14-2010 at 12:55 PM. Reason: a comment |
#25
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Real good thread.
I think many have mentioned the collecting gene a lot and I also believe in it. Because of that while we can have no idea what kids today will collect when they are older we do know that many of them will collect something. So they very well may collect cards when older just because they remember the game and the memories it gives them. I think baseballs popularity has a lot more to do with collecting cards later on than if you did as a kid or not. I never saw the Ruths and Cobbs play much less the Clementes and Jackie Robinsons but I stongly collect them and I dont really see any less demand for the real greats in the future. This got me thinking, how have the prices of vintage boxing cards done over the years. To me its a sport thats seen a huge decline in fans in the last 30-50 years or so and I wonder how the vintage cards are doing? Did they peak years ago? The only boxing cards I have purchased have been Dempsey, Louis and Ali exhibits, how have the top fighters cards done over the last 30 years or so vs all the other boxing cards? I wonder did most of the people collecting vintage boxing today, collect them as a kid or not? While I loved the card shows and stores of the 80's, if it was not for the internet I would not be collecting today. |
#26
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As far as 20 years from now, my responses are: 1. I plan to be around and actively collecting, so the cards will be just where they are now--gathering dust, like me. 2. If I happen to be gone, who cares? I will have had my fun and will not be in a position to do anything about it anyhow. 3. If the card market crashes to oblivion tomorrow I have still had a great time of it and will still collect--just with a lot more cards for the buck. Profit or losses are just numbers on an insurance valuation form if you do not plan to sell your cards. I don't. "Collecto ergo sum"--I collect therefore I am. Scott, as far as boxing cards go (and I think I have a bit of cred on this issue), prices have declined over the last two years on all but the best stuff, which I love BTW, but I don't think we have reached the potential on the issues. Same with nonsports. Baseball cards have become the province of the really well off and wealthy. When I started out I could realistically promise myself that I could afford a Wagner some day. Now it is just a fantasy. The same is true of many other marquee vintage baseball cards. Boxing, I can still afford even the most expensive cards. One other general observation on something that I think we often miss: fan bases for sports overlap with but are by no means congruent with collectors of cards from those sports. I know a lot of card collectors who do not follow the current versions of the sports in which they collect. I feel you either have the collecting bug or you don't. Case in point is one of my friends from the "outside" who is a huge sports fan but who could not care less about collecting anything from the sports he follows. He has a few pieces displayed in his rec room for atmosphere but that's it. He'd rather go to an insurance seminar than to a card convention and he thinks what we do is nuts. I haven't followed football since the Raiders left town and I haven't followed hockey since Gretzky retired but I collect cards from those sports from the 1960s and 1970s.
__________________
Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... Last edited by Exhibitman; 01-15-2010 at 09:03 AM. |
#27
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judsonhamlin-I am in Livingston, New Jersey. I have a website which will post directions. I do not know if I am allowed to post a website address on these boards so I will not.
Exhibitman-The Thanksgiving 1976 show is the exact same show we purchased the Ruth card. What an incredible show, no price guides and $10 could buy you a t206 Cobb. We both got great deals, I held onto my Ruth and it will stay in its raw state forever. Last edited by bbeck; 01-15-2010 at 09:54 AM. Reason: did not spell correctly |
#28
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To what Adam said right above- I am in the vast minority and am exactly opposite of what you said. I could care less about today's pro sports, for the most part, but I love collecting old baseball cards. best regards
__________________
Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 01-15-2010 at 10:03 AM. Reason: typo |
#29
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Here's a key; stay away from everything but all-time greats. It's just like investing, stick with something that has the most potential to, at the very least, hold value. There is a reason I am stock-piling Derek Jeter cards and not Christian Guzman and buying up Hall of Famer rookie cards and not spending that money on wax boxes of new products. If you want to last in this hobby, you have to be smart.
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#30
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Cards shouldn't be about getting your money back or making enough to retire or fund your kids' college education. At least not in my opinion. I think most people buy and sell cards because they are collectors and enjoy the cards and their history, regardless of whether or not their collections rise in value over time. For example, I'm still working on completing hand collated sets from the 80's and 90's that have dramatically dropped in value. It's about cards and players that I started collecting when I was a kid, not return on investment... for me at least.
__________________
See my trading page for list of vintage needs including T206s and others: http://aerograd.weebly.com/index.html |
#31
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For the two or three posts that mentioned buying a card in 1976, I was just being conceived. My birthday is October 1, 1976.
It is also nice to see NJ represented well as I grew up in Summit and now live in Bedminster. |
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