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#1
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When I had a card store, a customer who was a pizza delivery guy at night
proposed a trade for a Roger Clemens Topps rookie for a pizza dlvd that night. Since I needed dinner and ya can't go wrong w/ pizza...I accepted. |
#2
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Back in the '77-'82 range, I would trade cards for concert tickets with a guy that had a ticket agency here in So Cal. He was from New York and was a big Yankee guy.
I remember seeing The Who, Queen, The Cars, Beach Boys, Neil Young, Rod Stewart, Linda Ronstadt, and plenty more... Good times. |
#3
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I accepted some ball cards as payment toward legal fees years ago. The client had seen some baseball stuff in my office, he brought cards along on his last office visit and offered some cards toward his fee.
Went to a show and bought a matted, unframed piece that had a photo of Fred Snodgrass and his autograph on a 3x5, bought it for $15 after a bit of haggling, years ago. Sold it to a fellow collector a few days later for $20, he'd been with me when I bought it for $15. Then I bought it back from him about a month later for $25. He'd thought he didn't have his autograph on anything, I thought I did, we were both mistaken at the time. I keep thinking I might get a new matte cut that would accommodate the photo, autograph, and a T206. |
#4
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When I was a teenager in the mid-1990's I got into a car wreck when my Jeep Cherokee slid off our driveway on some ice and hit a tree (happens all the time in Maine). It was about $500-$1000 worth of repairs and I traded ALL the repairs to a mechanic that I found out was a card collector for a 1986 Fleer Michael Jordan rookie. When that card went through the roof in 2000-2001 I thought I had made a bad trade but is retrospect now, I think it was pretty good on my end. I remember it being Mint but I am sure it was only in the 6-7 range.
Also, not really a "trade" but when my current wife and I were dating in college (late 1999) and I was broke, I took my nicest item I owned and put it on ebay and told her that whatever it went for would be what she could spend on the diamond for her engagement ring, I had already bought the band. I figured about $1000 and she had been looking at diamonds in that range, it was an 1889 Spalding black band trophy bat issued to a team with all the names of the players painted on the barrel etc. She watched with GREAT interest and it closed at about $2000 so she got herself a little bigger diamond. It was a good trade. Last edited by prewarsports; 05-08-2010 at 09:54 AM. |
#5
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Frank,
Your story sounds like the one of the two farmers who kept buying and selling the same cow to each other. One day one of the farmers sold it to someone else. The other farmer asked why he would do that because they were both getting rich off that cow. ![]() Mike Last edited by cliftons8; 05-08-2010 at 10:02 AM. Reason: add smiley |
#6
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I used to have a college job at a vided arcade in the early 80's.
I used to trade game tokens for cards from kids. I got about 100 nice EX-NM 61-64 cards, including many Hall of Famers and a 62 and 64 Mantle (the 62 graded a 6) from one guy for $50 and he also got to put his hand in the token machine and get 2 handfulls of game tokens. |
#7
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Back in 1988, I traded my entire 1950's-60's Topps collection,thousands upon thousands of cards with many duplicates of key cards for three guitars, a 1958 Fender Strat and a pair of 1969 Gibson Les Paul customs. I still have all three and have them hanging on the wall in cases. I have seen comparable Strats in the 40k range and the Gibsons in the 20k range. Back in 1988, I thought it was a fair trade based on card values at the time,today it would be hard to say,this was way before card grading companies were around, so it would hard to place a value on those cards in today's market, or even when card values were at their peak. I can't even recall what all I had, I do know that I had a half dozen or more each of Ryan, Rose, and Seaver rookies. I am just glad I didn't start selling off my pre-war collection back then. Since then ,with the exception of a few key cards from 1952-58 Topps I have stayed focused on pre-war and never replaced those cards.
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#8
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http://www.flickr.com/photos/calvindog/sets |
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