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  #1  
Old 12-04-2010, 10:23 PM
FrankWakefield FrankWakefield is offline
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If I soaked a bunch of T206s off of a scrapbook page, sent them to be graded, and they came back 7's, then I'd have no qualms about it. I don't doubt that the other 7's that had been graded were from scrapbooks; at least most of them were.

Soaking doesn't alter the card. The card remains the same. The dirt, paste, scrapbook paper, tobacco bits, they aren't altered either, they're merely safely disengaged from the card.

When I buy or trade for a T206 I don't ask if it had been soaked. Once I get the card if it looks like it needs soaking then eventually I get around to doing that, most of the time. If I were to ask it would only be to see if the seller/trader had already tried soaking so I could avoid wasting time doing it. Ideally, I'd be happy if they'd already soaked off the dirt and all. Now I'm not advocating bleaching, spooning, stretching nor trimming. This entire matter (ie collectors thinking soaking a T206 is wrong) remains unbelievable to me... collectors who were collecting in the 50s and 60s and 70s soaked old tobacco cards without batting an eye. But of course there weren't slabs back then, a fellow could hold his card, could touch it, and see and feel what he had.
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  #2  
Old 12-04-2010, 11:32 PM
rarerookies rarerookies is offline
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Anything done to a card that makes it more appealing is in my opinion altering the card. You don't touch up the Mona Lisa and you don't touch and original card with 100 years of dirt, tobacco, etc.


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Originally Posted by FrankWakefield View Post
If I soaked a bunch of T206s off of a scrapbook page, sent them to be graded, and they came back 7's, then I'd have no qualms about it. I don't doubt that the other 7's that had been graded were from scrapbooks; at least most of them were.

Soaking doesn't alter the card. The card remains the same. The dirt, paste, scrapbook paper, tobacco bits, they aren't altered either, they're merely safely disengaged from the card.

When I buy or trade for a T206 I don't ask if it had been soaked. Once I get the card if it looks like it needs soaking then eventually I get around to doing that, most of the time. If I were to ask it would only be to see if the seller/trader had already tried soaking so I could avoid wasting time doing it. Ideally, I'd be happy if they'd already soaked off the dirt and all. Now I'm not advocating bleaching, spooning, stretching nor trimming. This entire matter (ie collectors thinking soaking a T206 is wrong) remains unbelievable to me... collectors who were collecting in the 50s and 60s and 70s soaked old tobacco cards without batting an eye. But of course there weren't slabs back then, a fellow could hold his card, could touch it, and see and feel what he had.
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  #3  
Old 12-04-2010, 11:34 PM
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Vol Vol is offline
Isaac Lane
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Quote:
Originally Posted by rarerookies View Post
Anything done to a card that makes it more appealing is in my opinion altering the card. You don't touch up the Mona Lisa and you don't touch and original card with 100 years of dirt, tobacco, etc.
Not that it matters, but they do touch the Mona Lisa.
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  #4  
Old 12-04-2010, 11:48 PM
rarerookies rarerookies is offline
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so is that restoring it or altering?


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Not that it matters, but they do touch the Mona Lisa.
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  #5  
Old 12-04-2010, 11:50 PM
rarerookies rarerookies is offline
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besides, everyone knows that the real mona lisa was destroyed along with the holy grail in indiana jones and the last crusade


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Originally Posted by VOLnVEGAS View Post
Not that it matters, but they do touch the Mona Lisa.
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  #6  
Old 12-05-2010, 02:55 AM
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fkw fkw is offline
Frank Kealoha Ward
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The card was not issued with dirt on it...

I have on many occasions used a damp tissue to remove dirt from the surface of a card... the same thing they do to old paintings, they remove the grime to bring out the original color. Its not altering the card or painting, its cleaning it and leaves no residue.

But I wouldnt soak the whole card to remove a stain... its a bit risky, and some stains will actually spread more.
I would only soak a card completely if it were glued into a scrapbook..... to remove the back paper and as much of the glue as possible.
To me the risk of a little water damage is much nicer than a huge paper pull from "dry pulling" a card from a scrapbook. If a grader cant tell there was water used, its all good by me. Even if they detect a water stain, they only downgrade, they dont reject.
Heck many Cuban cards have been rained on and have mildew stains from the humidity too. Water is natural, but can damage too.

Altering = trimming a piece off, recoloring a bad spot or print defect, rebuilding corners, filling in pinholes, or gluing rips or a paper pulls back down, rebacking (ie N172s), or chemical bleaching out stains (ie E145's), etc.

Last edited by fkw; 12-05-2010 at 03:12 AM.
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  #7  
Old 12-05-2010, 05:16 AM
barrysloate barrysloate is offline
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You can make the argument that the person who originally glued the cards into an album altered them by adding glue to the backs, and by removing them wouldn't you be reversing that alteration and returning them to their natural state?
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  #8  
Old 12-05-2010, 07:21 AM
Frank A Frank A is offline
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I find this kind of funny. Million dollar paintings are washed, restored in many different ways and just plain made to look better, and thats OK. But a penny baseball card is soaked and my god what have you done? Soak em all you want. Your making them look better and more original, like the painting.
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