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#1
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Posted By: Jim Novotny
I read in a post today a comment about PSA 8s being soaked and pressed and I have also recently have had a good discussion about how to do this. My questions are: |
#2
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Posted By: Joann
I guess I don't have enough spares yet, or whatever. I think I'd have a heart attack if I ever actually submerged any of my cards in water. Do they really stand up to that? |
#3
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Posted By: Bob
I know a guy who soaked aover 1000 T206s years ago to remove the paper attached to the back from a scrapbook. I am sure many of them are in PSA 8 and 9 holders as they were beautiful with sharp corners. |
#4
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Tell us about it, Bob. |
#5
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Posted By: Rob
The pressing needs to be done to keep the card from curling. 2 limitations with soaking include: 1. Many cards will have a surface coating that which will dull from the water, which makes many issues like T207's unsuitable for soaking for obtaining a high grade. 2. The adhesive also needs to be removed cleanly and without stains or paper loss to get a high grade, that's even more problematic when dealing with old paper. Unlike stamps, you don't know what kind of adhesive you're dealing with. |
#6
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Posted By: B
I have some t206's that I want to soak press, can anyone give me the step process so i can give this a try to my cards. One is a tinker portrait that has some tape on the back. email me the directions if you are so kind at |
#7
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Posted By: John S
I have an issue with cards that have been soaked, especially when this methodology is used to stretch a card that might not be the correct dimensions. Soaking to remove paper is not as objectionable but then you get into the gray area of card restoration, of which I am not a fan. I recently saw some Diamond Stars PSA 8's on ebay that had to be "cleaned" or chemically treated. I have handled hundreds of these cards and have never seen borders even approaching the brightness that these displayed. It could have been the image/scanner but the grouping of cards was too uniform in appearance. |
#8
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Posted By: Josh K.
How often as collectors do you do this? I have not soaked t206s but have soaked e121s to remove paper/glue on several occasions. |
#9
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Posted By: Morrie
I've soaked/pressed a few cards, and actually have one sitting at home that was part of a lot I bought from a fellow board member that I'll probably do this evening. I don't do it to remove wrinkles (that may be a minor side-effect, but most of my cards have enough wrinkles that I could run them over with a steam-roller and you wouldn't be able to tell the difference!), just to get rid of excess junk on their backs. |
#10
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Posted By: Keith O'Leary
Tape is a different animal altogether Josh. Try heating the tape up with a hair drier. After its heated up, take something like a knife's edge to work the corner of the tape up. If it gives you any trouble, keep heating until the adhesive on the tape becomes guier (sp...but had to get a computer term in LOL) and more plyable. I wanted to add...More heat is better than not enough. You want the adhesive to become so soft that none is left on the card when pulling the tape off. |
#11
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
about 600-700 baseball and non-sports cards from an album and I'd agree with basically everything above. I usually used about 10-20 sheets of white copy paper as a couple didn't soak up enough of the water. I'd pat them dry with a dish towel or something. The bottom line about soaking is it is entirely up to the type of glue that was used. If the flour type glue was used, it is relatively easy. If the dark-colored horse-type glue was used, you don't want to try it anyway cause they look like hell.... |
#12
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Posted By: Brett
I baught these 8 t206s. Could someone tell me how to remove these properly ? |
#13
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Soaking and pressing obviously works for T206 cards... |
#14
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Posted By: Anonymous
Any hope for this fellow before I send it off? I had a previous post about it, but did not include these pictures. Tape appears to rap around slightly to the front on the right side. Any help is appreciated! |
#15
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Posted By: joe
I know two collectors who did this soaking back in the 1970's with T206 cards. I never tried it, they just put the cards in a bathtub full of water and it worked for them. I guess I should get some glue and paper on back cards and try it. |
#16
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Posted By: Dennis W.
I've emailed a couple of board members privately on this topic but I wanted to bump this thread and get some members views concerning one of Jim's original questions: |
#17
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
I don't see how using ONLY PURE WATER to clean a card can be considered wrong. |
#18
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Posted By: warshawlaw
It may or may not work to remove cards from albums with distilled water. I am leery of any chemical treatments. |
#19
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Posted By: T206Collector
...soaking T206 cards. But I have also had some pretty sorry outcomes. It all depends on the type of glue involved. My best work now resides in holders as high as SGC 70. |
#20
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Posted By: Dennis W.
Actually rehydrating vintage paper is good for it. Document/book restorers do it all the time. The Conservation Services at the South Carolina Department of Archives and History call their water-based treatment "aqueous buffering". Their treatment consists of a distilled/deionized water soultion with a dash of other chemicals they use to deacidify. I certainly don't condone using any chemicals on cards. I also want to add that essentially any chemical used other than water will glow under the blacklight. |
#21
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Posted By: identify7
I do not frown upon any alteration which can not be detected. Because if it can not be detected, it does not exist. |
#22
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Posted By: Dennis W.
Times must be changing. It wasn't long ago that "card washing" was a dirty word (sorry for the pun). |
#23
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Washing with ANYTHING other than water would be a "no-no" to me for sure. |
#24
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Posted By: Al
Does anyone have before/after photos they could post using just water. I'm wondering how well this works. |
#25
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Posted By: Dean H
I have to say that right now I'm against it. To me it's the intent to enhance a cards appearance that I don't like. I know some do it for their own personal collection but it seems to be a gray area. Will this lead us to accepting other methods later? I think I would shy away from a card that I know has been soaked. |
#26
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Posted By: RayB
Jim, |
#27
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
I have to agree with what Ray just said, and I too am quite surprised at the ho-hum attitude when in recent times this Board has just trashed sellers whose "alterations" were at worst comparable and in some cases even more minor. EDITED TO ADD Hal, I am frankly surprised to hear your opinions, I had thought you were a passionate opponent of restoration and I frankly don't understand the technical distinctions you are drawing, what's the difference if water or something else is used for the purpose of removing glue or a crease? |
#28
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
guess it's semantics. I didn't, nor wouldn't, add to a card or use anything other than water. In many cases, these aren't 'well travelled' cards. They might be EXMT to NRMT cards that have a piece of paper--something that wasn't intended to be on the card to begin with. If it is removed, without incident and without using anything other than water, I can almost surely guarantee that a grading company will grade it and I believe they should. |
#29
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Peter: |
#30
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
Peter: |
#31
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
Hal, how do you know soaking and pressing a card doesn't ALTER the fibers in some way? I would imagine it does, indeed by definition it must as it takes out the crease. As for being "natural" there are plenty of natural substances on earth besides water, are you really implying anything used to alter a card would be OK as long as it is "natural"? |
#32
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
No, I am saying that it is "natural" for a baseball card to get WET from WATER at some point during the lifespan of the card. |
#33
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
I am also still wanting to know from someone which cards out there are possible "soakers"... |
#34
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Posted By: Adam Smith
I am shocked that so many people consider soaking and pressing an acceptable form of alteration. |
#35
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
Hal if it's perfectly fine why do you want to know which of your cards may have been soaked? |
#36
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Posted By: Josh K.
Hal, |
#37
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
Interesting choice of words in Hal's post, "get past" the grading companies. Are their ethical standards higher than this Board's? That sure is turning the world on its head given all the trash talking about grading companies. |
#38
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Posted By: Morrie
If you don't like it, don't do it. I don't view it as altering a card to, as a number of people have put it, remove excess paper that was never supposed to be there. The implication that those of us who have soaked cards to remove paper that was not factory-applied -- in a manner that's consistent with other preservation and restoration methods -- might be behaving unethically is, to me, a little bizarre. If I tear them out of a scrapbook and lose part of the back, am I being more ethical? Or am I supposed to collect ephemera attached to ephemera? I'd rather just stick to baseball cards, thanks. |
#39
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Posted By: Dennis W.
Hal seems to be taking some heat for a practice many of us here engage in. I personally see no harm in it. I just can't accept the fact that some kid 100 years ago glued a card in a scrapbook and now that card is destined to carry that paper around on it's back forever. If you shouldn't remove the scrapbook residue then why is it ok to remove it from the book at all? Has not the book become as much a piece of the card as the residue? |
#40
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Posted By: Peter_Spaeth
Dennis I think two distinct things are being collapsed in the discussion, one is scrapbook removal, two is the process of soaking and pressing a card with the intent to remove a crease and obtain a higher grade. My comments, and I think Hal's for the most part, have been addressed more to the latter. |
#41
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Posted By: warshawlaw
are dirty old men |
#42
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Posted By: Dennis W.
Nicely spoken Adam and I agree. The only thing I want to add, and I realize I may be beating a dead horse, is that by soaking and pressing a card with scrapbook residue you will end up cleaning it and maybe remove wrinkles. It's a byproduct of the process. What's the difference when it comes to removing dirt? Is it only ethical to clean a card with paper residue on it? |
#43
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Posted By: Tom Boblitt
people don't post under their real names (unless they are famous for writing economic theory)......... |
#44
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Posted By: Rick
Is there a possibility that after rolling a wrinkle it could resurface again if not done properly? |
#45
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Posted By: scott brockelman
While i did not read each and every thread, MOST pertain to soaking and drying a card between paper and a heavy object. THIS IS NOT PRESSING a card, cards which are soaked and press rolled to lengthen the card and then trim it are what are meant by "pressing" a card. the fellows above are merely removing glue and paper remnants, no harm or damage to the card at all, true occasionally a minor wrinkle might come out, but nothing heavy. the cards that everyone is scared of in high grade holders were not soaked in a bathtub and put in between a phone book to dry, they were soaked, press rolled, dried and trimmed, an entirely different and advanced method. |
#46
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Posted By: Anonymous
-- |
#47
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Posted By: Jim Crandell
I am stunned that so many collectors would find soaking and pressing cards acceptable. |
#48
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Posted By: Daniel Bretta
I soaked this Comiskey Scrapps off just last week using regular tap water with no problem...The backing did not completely come off, but it looks a whole lot better off of the page than it did on. I cut off the other scraps on the page to test them before I tried the Comiskey and of course they came off of the paper with ease....Comiskey on the other hand must have been glued in with a different type of glue. |
#49
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Posted By: Hal Lewis
I agree 100% with Scott B. |
#50
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Posted By: Todd Schultz
Seems to me, as I mentioned in another thread a week or two ago, that it's cheating, especially with ersatz high grade cards. A card should have nice edges and corners if it lived nearly all of its life pasted in an album. I realize that any high grade pre-war card somehow escaped heavy handling for years, whether in between pages of a book, carefully placed in an envelope or drawer, cigar box, etc. Still, the reward (read price) for surviving unscathed seems cheapened if you can accomplish the same thing by removing cards from albums and soaking off the glue. Just my two cents. |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
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