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#1
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The term "rare" has become no more than a marketing tool used by anyone trying to get a little more money for whatever he is selling.
I've thought that incorporating the numismatic rarity scale to cards wouldn't be a bad idea. For those unfamiliar with it, coins are ranked from Rarity 1 to Rarity 8, with R-1 being most common and R-8 signifying 2-3 examples known. I think it would be an excellent idea, except how accurately do any of us know how many examples of any card exist? I guess we have a pretty good idea, but even a card like a T206 Wagner has no precise population. At least a rarity scale quantifies a subjective term. |
#2
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As someone who enjoys collecting "rarity" in the card world I can testify that the term is way overused. I think about it very often when I see some cards that used to be (1-3 known) have a "find" of 50 show up and then they aren't really "rare" anymore, or at a minimum, much more plentiful than previously thought. The T205 and T206 Drum finds from the last few years as well as the M101 "Everybody's" and "Mall Theater" finds made some of those cards go from single digit known to something a bit more accessible. They are still "rare" compared to most other issues but not like they once were. One thing that many owners of these, and other, "rare" antiquities don't remember is that the "supply"(rarity) side of the supply-vs-rarity scale is only half of the value equation. And I think it could even be argued it is the less important, with respect to value, side of the equation. Case in point, '52 Mantle, T206 Wags, '33 Goudey Lajoie etc...There is such great demand for those cards that their value will always be high. I would venture to guess I have hundreds of cards in my collection more rare than any of those 3 cards but very few that would garner their kind of prices in auction. Great subject.....
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com |
#3
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And just to add - everyone views rarity in terms of their own collecting approach - e.g. as a type collector, Leon mentioned 50 cards showing up and some might no longer consider that issue rare, though, maybe only 1 of each player showed up and so another collector would view each player's card as rare.
A perfect example of this is the E101 and E102 issues. The E101 set has twice as many cards as the E102 set. E102s were often considered to be a tougher type card then E101 (though current populations show far fewer total E101s then E102s), but because the E101 set has so many more subjects, FAR fewer cards of each E101 subject exist then E102. The market is slowly catching up with that. |
#4
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Rare is a term used to get the most money you can out of an item. If you look on ebay every day there are so many rare items every day that it is unbelieveable. Rare should only be given to those items that are truly low in production numbers. An original painting, some early test coinage, etc. I feel that if there is fifty of something it is not rare. Scarce perhaps, but not rare. Ebay has taken the rarity out of many items that were thought to be rare. Just an opnion. Frank
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#5
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In the T206 realm,I think with the explosion of interest in rare backs,and rare front/back combo's,there will probably be a "re-birth" on what is considered a "rarity".
For instance,there are many Red Cobb's out there,but TedZ pointed out that there are (I hope I'm getting this right,and apologize if I'm not) something like only 4 known examples of the Red Cobb with the Sov.460 back.That would make that front/back combo extremely more rare than the Wagner,Plank,and the Magie error.But I guess it hasn't garnered that status because there are many more Red Cobb T206's out there in population without regard to "backs". I love the fact that people are really starting to recognize the front/back combo's more and more,because I think it is creating sort of a "new standard" of rarity within the T206 set,and a new respect for the difficulty of certain cards/combo's........ Sincerely,Clayton Last edited by teetwoohsix; 04-05-2010 at 01:28 AM. Reason: spelling |
#6
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'At least a rarity scale quantifies a subjective term.'
I agree wholeheartedly. best, barry |
#7
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The four letter word "rare," has totally lost it's meaning.
Whenever I see it, I instantly equate it to the four letter word "HYPE." You can have all the surveys you want, they're just a drop in the bucket of the unknown raw cards out there. ... but they are fun to read. ![]() |
#8
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Joe - I'm sure that's true, but it stands to reason that they are representative of the greater distribution, just like a poll represents the full population. If SGC has only graded 100 cards of a particular issue and 5000 cards of another, we can safely assume the ungraded cards also exist in correlating ratios.
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#9
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Edited to add that Gary Engel's Japanese Baseball Card Price Guide also attempts to rank sets with scarcity levels (R1, R2, etc) which helps the novice collector quite a bit. Last edited by rman444; 04-02-2010 at 04:09 PM. |
#10
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Richard- the rarity system works if it is accurate. Coin guys seem to have a better grasp of how many of a certain variety are known. I don't think baseball card collectors ever looked at the hobby that way. But it may be in the future.
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#11
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#12
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Matt- there is a distinction between subjective and objective measurements. To say a Wagner is rarer than a Plank is more subjective; it's just an observation that they come up for sale less often.
But to say there are eight Doyles known, which in coin terms would make it a Rarity-7, is much more precise. |
#13
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The US mint has circulation numbers of each coin, or better said, how many of each was made. It is usually a specific number...even if many have been lost or destroyed there is a number to start with. That is not a luxury that pre-war card collecting can have except in very rare (no pun intended) cases.
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Leon Luckey www.luckeycards.com Last edited by Leon; 04-02-2010 at 04:21 PM. |
#14
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You start with the rarest card at one extreme and the most common at the other and work out the math in between. I wrote a post about 2 years ago regarding E-card rarity that did just this; they naturally broke into about 6 or 7 groups of rarity. Last edited by Matt; 04-02-2010 at 04:29 PM. Reason: Added link to thread |
#15
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Yes , relative rarity is a useful tool, and that is something you learn when you are in the hobby for a long time. Also, if an E101 Cobb in Very Good condition typically sells for $1500, and an E102 Cobb in the same condition sells for $1200, you assume the E101 is relatively scarcer. But it may not always be true.
Last edited by barrysloate; 04-02-2010 at 04:29 PM. |
#16
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most confuse rare -
is it a limited number of something made? or is it a limited number of something available? i'm guessing the truth is a combination of the two. |
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