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#1
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I think the internet has made it easier to learn about cards from different sets that you may have otherwise not been aware of. There have been several times I've seen cards in the pickup threads from sets that I had never heard of. With all of the knowledgeable collectors on this board anytime you want to find out info on something all you have to do is ask and someone will usually come through and point you in the right direction.
Last edited by Doug; 03-02-2010 at 07:11 AM. |
#2
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The internet has certainly made many collectibles that once seemed rare not so rare anymore. There are auctions 365 days a year, 24/7 so most anything you want is available at any time.
I was also interviewed yesterday for that article and I was asked if the internet has changed our perception of which cards are rare. I had trouble answering that one as I am not sure. There are a few cards today that were known twenty years ago that probably didn't have the stature they do now. In particular I thought of the 1914 Baltimore News Ruth and the T210 Jackson. If you had one of these in 1985 or 1990, they really didn't sell for that much. But did the internet affect our different ideas about them? I don't know. |
#3
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I echo Doug's post, and I add
1) Online Auctions - I would have never have been able to accumulate my collection without them. 2) Collector Forums - The knowledge I have gained and the friends I have made allow me to keep permanent interest in the hobby. If one collecting project ends there is always another one that can get started. 3) Other Resources - Baseball Reference, Old Cardboard, etc... Again, knowledge is power... 4) The ability to share your collection via websites...
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My collection: http://imageevent.com/vanslykefan Last edited by Robextend; 03-02-2010 at 08:09 AM. |
#4
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I wouldn't call it the age of enlightenment but it kind of is. It's nice to talk to people all over the place and see what they are collecting. This forum has brought a lot of great collectors and info together. The crazy part is that in reality the hobby is still in it's infancy phase, so it's tough to predict what the future holds but will be fun to see. The internet gives a chance to get many items that previously you had no chance of getting unless you lived in certain markets that had shows or dealers with great inventory, and growing up in the midwest that wasn't an option.
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#5
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I know without the internet it would have taken me much longer to complete the Monster. With that being said I may have not attempted the set at all if it were not for the internet.
Sloate brings up an interesting, thought provoking issue, what cards have taken center stage due to the internet? T210 Jackson and the 1914 Ruth are certainly on the list, but I'd say the whole caramel boom is due mostly in part of the availability and exposure via the internet. |
#6
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Leon I think there are two very easy answers for me. When I was led to Ebay it meant that I could find things in a week that used to take months or years. Back in the mid-70s if you were collecting E-90s you might see three offered in a six moth period in any of the magazines.
You might buy three an hour now. Even when I found great people who had vintage cards in their inventory you might still have a 4-6 week turn around on a transaction. I used to send Gar Miller a check for $25.00 and then wait two weeks for a package full of cards I had never seen. There were not many people as honorable as Gar on the quality of their cards so that brings me to the second real plus of the net. We can now see what we are buying, there a still a few surprises but not many. The net still can offer you a little bit of a persons personality too. We form friendships that can last a long time. After saying that I have to also add that one of the reasons that I quit collecting around 1990 was that I really did not like going into that new wave of card shops that sprang up over night it seemed. Very few of those dealers knew what a T206 card was and most could not even name the teams in the major leagues. |
#7
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The internet makes so much information available to anyone. Back in the late 80s/early 90s, as a fairly isolated collector, I had three places to look for information on vintage cards. One was a major price guide. Beckett was the standard, but I had an early SCD version. This wasn't much of a read. The second option was the latest issue of SCD. While SCD did have ads for pre-WWII material, at that time most of SCD seemed to focus on the prices of 52 Topps high numbers. The third option was Larry Fritsch's one-of-a-kind catalog. That thing included sets that weren't in the price guides and seemed to never appear in SCD ads. I thought the prices were high, but I really wasn't informed enough to know the market.
Today, eBay alone has far more information that all those sources combined. Just look at the current auctions, BINs, and completed transactions. Throw in the websites that people have put together, and even a casual collector has more information than a typical dealer did back in the day. |
#8
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I don't think I could have made as much an inroad in my type card collecting without the internet.... this year alone I have already acquired some items that would have taken many shows over many months/years, combing through publications etc to even locate...let alone purchase.
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#9
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The internet makes it much easier to collect obscure cards and to check pricing but I sure do miss the old swap meet type shows. There is no way I would have the collection I have today if not for Ebay and BST boards here and in a couple of other places.
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