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#1
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There was a thread on this a while back ago and if I remember correctly someone suggested that the Cobb card was stacked under Bradley at one time and they both got wet and Cobb's ink transfered to the back. Hope this helps.
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#2
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Larry, this was the old thread discussing the Bradley/Cobb card:
http://www.net54baseball.com/showthr...hlight=bradley |
#3
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Considering some of the things I've seen sell as "unusual" and "rare", I can't imagine someone wouldn't be interested for what you paid for it. There is a very popular site about this set that has sold less interesting oddities for more. My fear when looking at it was that a transfer like that could be replicated easily from the home and was probably due to moisture. The question is whether or not it's worth something if the transfer occurred from a period Cobb.
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#4
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I think a lot of the cards that folks dance about, proclaiming 'wet sheet transfer' as some magical mantra.... I think a bunch of those cards, most of them, are just where some kid had a bunch of cards stacked together, maybe in his pocket, and they got wet. No magic, no wet sheet... just a messed up card.
Don't know what you paid for it. If you're happy with it, then you got a good deal. Sincerely. If I'm wrong, if all of these things are 'wet sheet transfers', then what are the cards where they just got wet and the ink bled... what are those called, and where are they? |
#5
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It's kinda fitting it would be Bill Bradley on the front w/ the Cobb wet sheet transfer as Bradley (according to some accounts) was one of Cobb's favorite ballplayers as a youngster. A young Cobb who had attended a spring game (I believe) and Bradley took some time out and spoke w/ Cobb and he was instantly one of the few ballplayers Cobb ever really looked up to for a while.
Fairly ironic/fortuitous card given the circumstances behind the two men together (not to wax too poetic or anything). -Rhett
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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; 01-20-2010 at 08:30 PM. |
#6
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Larry - I was watching this card also and found it to be very interesting. As far as it being worth what you paid for it, only you can answer that question. If you enjoy having this card being a part of your personal collection, then I think its worth it.
As far as this card ending up this way from getting wet and being stacked on another card, let me ask this question then. Why doesn't the color fade out of T206s when they are soaked? C'mon now...we all know there are cards out there that have been soaked. There is even a link on this site with step-by step instructions on how to do it. In the instructions, it says to place the wet (soaked) card in a folded paper towel. Isn't this the same as stacking wet cards? Does the card image transferred onto the paper towel? I can't answer these questions because I have never soaked a card, but I own a soaked T206. One of the hazards of buying from a scan and not having the card in-hand. I can say from looking at my soaked T206 that it doesn't appear to have lost any of it's original color. I'm not saying I'm right, just relaying my experience. Jantz |
#7
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I unsucessfully transferred a Pfeister seating (has a nice bright orange background) to the back of a Piedmont. The attempt was to apply reasonable moisture with that equal to a damp environment instead of a deep soaking. There was no evidence of any transfer of ink, but it's possible that it could occur over an extended period of time.
If you're happy with it and you didn't use the power bill money to buy it then I'd say you did good. |
#8
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Jantz, I agree with you as far as today's water, and 100 year old dried ink. The cards are soaked with virtually no bleed. (Although I do think there's a slight bleed if soaked for days.)
Put some old, ragged T206s in your pocket and splash a bit of kerosene on there. Kids would not have been around gasoline, much, in 1910. Kerosene was all around. I think with kerosene on fairly recent ink you get a different result. It seems an amazing coincidence that a wet sheet, placed atop another, would align so that the wet transfer exactly matched up, card for card. Such a transfer seems more likely from card to card, after they were cut. Anyone with such a card wants it to be a 'wet sheet transfer', so that's what they'll see it as, whether it is or isn't. Last edited by FrankWakefield; 01-21-2010 at 06:28 AM. |
#9
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Hmmm, so are you saying that if I go without electricity for a few months out of the year I could have more $$$ for pre-war cards? I'm game, but I'm not sure on how flexible my wife is going to be. Lovely Day... |
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