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#101
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Posted By: cmoking
Scott, thanks for posting that link, awesome cards! |
#102
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Posted By: cmoking
T206 - at least you didn't try sending GAI cards for crossover to PSA - where 9 out of 10 will come back Evidence of Trimming. |
#103
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Posted By: Al Crisafulli
In the neighborhood in which I grew up, there was a man who collected Topps sets from packs from every year beginning in 1952. Unlike most kids, he would buy the packs, take the cards right out of the packs, put them in numerical order right in a box, and never look at them again. He kept his doubles, and those are the cards he played with. |
#104
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Posted By: dan mckee
There are plenty of raw high grade cards out there, my run of bowman topps and playball were assembled in the 1970s and I have had about a dozen cards slabbed, sold to FISH, and replaced by raw, nice EX cards. Damn that is easy money! Thanks Fish. |
#105
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Posted By: Richard Masson
If you are estimating the number of adults who assembled Topps sets from packs in the 1950s, the number is far less than one in 50,000. In the old days, these people were a rare breed. |
#106
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Posted By: Al Crisafulli
He was a KID in the 1950s when he started. |
#107
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Posted By: jay behrens
There may not have been that ratio, but there were a number of collectors in the 50s that were putting away boxes and even cases of cards. I've personally seen a collection, more like left over store stock, of unopened boxes of Topps and Bowman baseball and football from 1951 to 1968. This was someone who wasn't collector and know of long time collectors that stashed away boxes from the 50s. |
#108
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Posted By: identify7
What is true for Topps is also true for Goudey and Playball. Of course somewhat more Topps have survived because they are 20 years newer, but cards were put away in top condition for these other sets, and are still away. Imho. |
#109
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Posted By: warshawlaw
All you have to know about the relative scarcity of these cards was on display at the National. I'd say about 50% of the dealers there had significant displays of high grade 1950s-1960s cards. As far as I am concerned, the market for near mint to mint (8 and up) post-war cards is driven by underendowed set registry geeks and hype-happy auctioneers. It is not a scarcity driven market but is instead a demand driven one. The proof is in what happens with mid-grade 1950s-1960s cards; they sit and rot unless deeply discounted. Contrast that with pre-war cards, where virtually everything flies off the table and we are seriously debating the merits and values of altered, trimmed, recolored and/or just plain wrecked vintage cards. |
#110
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Posted By: Jim Crandell
Warshawlaw, |
#111
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Posted By: warshawlaw
purchasing high grade stuff of major stars from the 1960s if I can find it at a reasonable discount to market on the theory that the money will trend in that direction as people are priced out of the other stuff? |
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