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#1
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Wish I had been able to pick up more of these beauties from last summer's REA - I went strong on the Junior Gilliam, too, but needed to wimp out. Anyway, I am very happy to have ol' Vinegar Bend Mizell in my collection - it is dazzling in hand.
It's difficult to get a good angle on the proof's material or its thickness through the slab. It looks to be approximately the same thickness as the Topps baseball card. It doesn't have any of the "feathery" cut of the cardboard of the waxpack card; it is a far cleaner cut. It suggests to me that artist's paper of some thickness was used rather than it being cardboard. It doesn't look like any kind of hardboard like Masonite to me. It has a certain rigidity to it that I think would rule out it being canvas. Is it bendable? Probably a little bit. As mentioned there is glue on the back. Many of the proofs offered by REA had glue remnants on the front as well. How the proof was used in the mechanical process of producing the BB cards, where the glue came in etc, I have not a clue. Some Board guys have printshop experience and could address that aspect. ![]() ![]() |
#2
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Some original for 1950s-60s Topps cards were flexichromes which were painted plastic photos. However, I'm pretty darn sure the 1953 paintings aren't flexichromes. And, however again, I don't know what the 1953 Topps paints were on. Looks like some sort of paper stock, but I don't know. It's hard to look at an image and deduce whether it's plasticy or papery in person. If heavy paper is covered in dried acrylic paint, and perhaps a varnish or something put over the surface, I could see how someone might say it has a bendy, plasticy feel. It's going to have a different feel than an index card.
Last edited by drc; 12-20-2010 at 05:05 PM. |
#3
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My guess is gouache (an opaque gum-base watercolor) on illustration board. Definitely not Flexichromes; I've seen movie lobby card flexichromes from the era and they look quite different than the 1953 artworks. The texture of the finished items (I saw some at the National) is all wrong for canvas unless the artist gesso'ed the hell out of it then sanded it, which seems unlikely for hundreds of small pictures, and the backs are wrong for canvas. Plastic would not be a medium of choice for works like this. You can turn out nice stuff on plastic but not with the textures and stokes showing on these cards at the speed needed for doing a few hundred paintings for a commercial production anywhere near as easily as on board. Oils seem unlikely just because of the production requirements--so many pieces churned out quickly for Topps screams water-based paint, not oils requiring time to dry. No, commercial illustrations churned out for a commercial production are most likely gouache on board. And damned nice too. Wish I'd gone harder after one in REA. Oh, well. As for glue on the fronts, perhaps residue from the paste-up during the process? I know I have an original piece of W517 art where the pasted-on card number fell off, leaving a slight residue where the circular number should be:
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Read my blog; it will make all your dreams come true. https://adamstevenwarshaw.substack.com/ Or not... Last edited by Exhibitman; 12-21-2010 at 06:37 AM. |
#4
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What do you guys think about this? Rob http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll...K%3AMEWNX%3AIT
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#5
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This is probably meaningless,and I'm certainly no printing guru,but that is not the same paper that the original set was printed on. I thought proofs were to simulate the actual production run.(?)
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#6
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This is just a copy of an original piece of artwork. As I prior post here (post #9), Gerry Dvorak was the artist on approx. 50 of the 1953 Topps cards.
During the 1980's and 1990's, Gerry Dvorak would set up at BB card shows and would autograph copies of the artwork he did for Topps back in 1952. This item of Tommy Byrne is a copy, and is an example of such. I have a bunch of these copies and when I can find them, I'll post them here. TED Z |
#7
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The ones I have are the same size as the original 1953 Topps cards, they are blank-backed and are not signed by the artist. Here's a picture. ![]() Last edited by peterose4hof; 08-04-2014 at 09:56 AM. |
#8
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Some clues might be here in a thread on the (old) Network 54 Hockey Forum. 1954-55 Topps Hockey also used paintings and there is a scan of what might be considered a proof about halfway down. http://www.network54.com/Forum/38176...+1954-55+Topps
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